dc.description.abstract | The northern and central metasedimentary belts (NMB,
CMB) are east-trending, regional (formation- to group-scale)
iithostratigraphic units within the Beardmore-Geraldton
Archean terrane of northern Ontario's Superior Province.
Gravelly braided rivers deposited the lithofacies
assemblage of clast-supported polymict conglomerate and interbedded sandstone that comprises most of the NMB. Felsic
volcanic pebbles and cobbles are the most abundant clast
lithology.
The CMB contains several east-trendinq lithofacies
assemblages that together form a generally northward coarsening
sequence. The southern CMB is composed of
mudstone, iron formation and sandstone with common graded
beds. This fine-grained assemblage is paralleled to the
north by a horizon of rhythmically bedded and cross-bedded
sandstone units, and a heterogeneous, conglomerate-rich
assemblage. The northern CMB strata are mostly a conglomeratic
assemblage similar in form (lithofacies) and composition
(provenance) to the NMB. Some fine-grained units
(mudstone. iron formation, graded sandstone) of relatively
minor regional extent are present near the north margin of
the CMB.
The CMB's southern (lower) fine-grained subaqueous
facies are apparently capped at different sites by: 1)
rhythmic delta front couplets; 2) sandy braided river
deposits with very rare associated intertidal strata; and 3)
a conglomeratic submarine fan or fan-delta front resedimented
assemblage. The northern (upper) CMB is a gravelly braided
river deposit, with minor aquabasinal facies.
The CMB is probably a 1-2 km thick structurally modified
homoclinal sequence. Relative positions of its depositional paleoenvironments, as deduced from lithofacies
assemblages, suggest that the epiclastic portion of the CMB
is the record of a dominantly coarsening-upward, subaqueous to subaerial trend that was produced by a prograding clastic
system(s), likely a number of fan-deltas.
The extreme eastern part of the CMB is composed of
generally oligomict, coarse (conglomeratic) felsic pyroclastic
and/or reworked volcaniclastic facies which are
probably subaerial deposits.
Similar clast compositions and several sedimentoiogical
criteria, including average maximum deformed clast size,
strongly suggest that highly proximal fluvial facies in the
NMB and more distal fluvial and aquabasinal facies in the CMB
were originally part of a continuous coarse clastic wedge or
sheet. | |