IN SUSPECT TERRANE? SEDIMENT PROVENANCE OF THE LATE ARCHEAN PHANTOM LAKE METAMORPHIC SUITE, SIERRA MADRE, WYOMING
There are two contrasting models for the origin of the Phantom Lake Metamorphic Suite. The first is that the rocks were deposited at or near the margin of the Wyoming craton (Houston et al., 1992). Alternatively, Chamberlain et al. (in press) suggest that the Phantom Lake Suite and its basement orthogneisses represent an exotic block accreted onto the Wyoming craton ca. 2620 Ma or younger. Field observations and Nd isotopic data do not definitively discriminate between either of these models, however the Sierra Madre orthogneisses have Late Archean Nd model ages of 2.9 Ga that distinguish them from orthogneisses in the central Wyoming Province that have Early Archean Nd model ages. The Phantom Lake Suite metasedimentary rocks also have Late Archean Nd model ages of 2.9 Ga, younger than model ages from most potentially correlative supracrustal sequences except for those preserved in the Rattlesnake Hills. The Rattlesnake Hills succession has been interpreted as back arc basin sediments tectonically juxtaposed onto much older basement gneiss (Fruchey, 2002). If the Phantom Lake Suite is related to the supracrustal sequence in the Rattlesnake Hills, it too may have been translated along the southern margin of the Wyoming craton.