Paper No. 4
Presentation Time: 8:00 AM-6:00 PM
The Trans-Hudson and Trans-North China Orogens: A Comparison Based on Geologic and Geophysical Observations
GAY, Juliana K.1, VAN NETTEN, Harmen H.
2 and KELLER, G. Randy
1, (1)School of Geology and Geophysics, University of Oklahoma, 100 E. Boyd, Norman, OK 73019, (2)Faculty of Geosciences, Utrecht University, Postbus 80.021, Utrecht, 3508 TA, Netherlands, juliana@ou.edu
Similarities and differences between the North American Trans-Hudson orogen (THO), and the Asian Trans-North China orogen (TNCO) have been analyzed. The first-order relationships between these two events are their age, gross spatial scale, and mechanism of orogenesis. Both orogens represent Paleoproterozoic (~1.9-1.8 Ga) collisional events that resulted from ocean closure. Subduction of these oceanic plates led to arc-related magmatism, and ultimately to continental collision and crustal thickening. The present-day geometry of the orogens is also comparable: both have north-south trends, indicating east-west convergence. Although the THO covers 5 times the area of the TNCO (~4600 km x ~400 km versus ~1200 km x ~300 km for TNCO), both orogens are of continental scale. Elevation and Bouguer gravity maps indicate little relationship to tectonic domains in both orogens, which might be related to post-collisional overprinting.
In addition to the similarities, many differences exist between the THO and TNCO. Three Archean cratons collided to form the THO: the Superior, Sask, and Rae-Hearne cratons from east to west. In the TNCO, only two cratons were involved (the Eastern and Western Blocks). The presence of an additional craton in the THO resulted in a much more complex structure than its Chinese analog: the TNCO can be roughly divided into areas of high- and low- metamorphic grade, but the interactions between the three plates in the THO resulted in many different domains within the well-exposed Reindeer zone. Stabilization of the TNCO occurred less than 50 Ma after terminal collision (as evidenced by voluminous sedimentation), while complete stabilization of the THO did not occur until ~100 million years after the final collision.
The Trans-Hudson and Trans-North China orogens are two representative collisions of the Paleoproterozoic. Analysis and comparison of these two events is providing insight into the process of continental growth.