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KEPPIE, J. D., DOSTAL, J., MURPHY, J. B., COUSENS, B. L. (1997) Palaeozoic within-plate volcanic rocks in Nova Scotia (Canada) reinterpreted: isotopic constraints on magmatic source and palaeocontinental reconstructions. Geological Magazine, 134 (4) 425-447 doi:10.1017/s001675689700719x

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Reference TypeJournal (article/letter/editorial)
TitlePalaeozoic within-plate volcanic rocks in Nova Scotia (Canada) reinterpreted: isotopic constraints on magmatic source and palaeocontinental reconstructions
JournalGeological Magazine
AuthorsKEPPIE, J. D.Author
DOSTAL, J.Author
MURPHY, J. B.Author
COUSENS, B. L.Author
Year1997 (July)Volume134
Issue4
PublisherCambridge University Press (CUP)
DOIdoi:10.1017/s001675689700719xSearch in ResearchGate
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Mindat Ref. ID257414Long-form Identifiermindat:1:5:257414:5
GUID0
Full ReferenceKEPPIE, J. D., DOSTAL, J., MURPHY, J. B., COUSENS, B. L. (1997) Palaeozoic within-plate volcanic rocks in Nova Scotia (Canada) reinterpreted: isotopic constraints on magmatic source and palaeocontinental reconstructions. Geological Magazine, 134 (4) 425-447 doi:10.1017/s001675689700719x
Plain TextKEPPIE, J. D., DOSTAL, J., MURPHY, J. B., COUSENS, B. L. (1997) Palaeozoic within-plate volcanic rocks in Nova Scotia (Canada) reinterpreted: isotopic constraints on magmatic source and palaeocontinental reconstructions. Geological Magazine, 134 (4) 425-447 doi:10.1017/s001675689700719x
In(1997, July) Geological Magazine Vol. 134 (4) Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Abstract/NotesPalaeozoic volcanism in the Avalon Terrane of northern Nova Scotia


occurred during three time

intervals: Cambrian–early Ordovician, late Ordovician–early


Silurian and middle–late Devonian. In the

Meguma Terrane of southern Nova Scotia, Palaeozoic volcanism is limited


to the middle Ordovician.

Geochemical data show that most of these volcanic rocks are bimodal,

within-plate suites. Initial εNd signatures

range from +5.4 to −1.9 in the rhyolites and +6.8 to +2.7 in the


basalts, a difference attributable to the

absence or presence, respectively, of a significant crustal component.


The data and regional tectonic settings

of the Avalon and Meguma terranes suggest that the volcanism was generated


in three different within-plate

settings: (1) Cambrian–early Ordovician volcanism related to

thermal decay of late Proterozoic arc magmatism

during transtensional deformation; (2) middle Ordovician–early

Silurian volcanism during sinistral telescoping

between Laurentia and Gondwana where extensional bends in the

Appalachians produced rifting;

and (3) Devonian volcanism resulting from lithospheric delamination

during dextral transpression and telescoping.

In each setting, active faults served as conduits for the magmas. Nd

isotopic data indicate that the

source of the Palaeozoic felsic volcanic rocks is isotopically

indistinguishable beneath southern and northern

Nova Scotia and did not substantially change with time. This crustal

source appears to have separated from

the mantle during the Proterozoic, a conclusion consistent with the

hypothesis that the Palaeozoic rocks in

Nova Scotia were deposited upon a late Proterozoic oceanic–cratonic


volcanic arc terrane. The Nd data, when

combined with published faunal, palaeomagnetic and U–Pb

isotopic data, suggest that the Avalon Terrane

was peripheral to Gondwana off northwestern South America during

Neoproterozoic and early Palaeozoic times.


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