Cordilleran Section - 109th Annual Meeting (20-22 May 2013)

Paper No. 7
Presentation Time: 3:50 PM

APPLICATION OF THE MODERN OPHIOLITE CONCEPT WITH SPECIAL REFERENCE TO PRECAMBRIAN OPHIOLITES


KUSKY, Timothy M., State Key Lab for Geological Processes, China University of Geosciences Wuhan, 388 Lumo Road, Wuhan, 430074, China, WANG, Lu, State Key Lab for Geological Processes and Mineral Resources, China University of Geosciences, 388 Lumo Road, Wuhan, 430074, China, DILEK, Yildirim, Geology & Environmental Earth Science, Miami University, 116 Shideler Hall, Patterson Avenue, Oxford, OH 45056 and ROBINSON, Paul T., Department of Earth Sciences, Dalhousie University, Halifax, NS B3H 4R2, Canada, tkusky@gmail.com

Much has been learned in the past 40 years about the great diversity of the internal structure and geochemical compositions of Phanerozoic ophiolites, indicating that these on-land fragments of ancient oceanic lithosphere formed in distinctly different tectonic settings during their igneous evolution. Recent studies in Archean and Proterozoic greenstone belts have shown that the Precambrian rock record may also include exposures of a diverse suite of ophiolite complexes as part of craton development in the early history of the Earth. We review the salient features of the Precambrian ophiolite record to highlight what has been learned about Precambrian oceanic spreading systems since the original Penrose definition of ophiolites in 1972. Some of the diagnostic, characteristic, typical, and rare aspects of ophiolites of all ages are presented in order to help determine if tectonically deformed and metamorphosed sequences in Precambrian shield areas may be considered as ophiolites. The results of this comparative analysis are important in that they enable researchers to more realistically characterize allochthonous mafic/ultramafic rock sequences as ophiolitic or non-ophiolitic. This approach is more deterministic in contrast to some other arbitrary classification schemes requiring three or four of the Penrose-style ophiolitic units to be present in the Precambrian record for a specific rock sequence to be considered ophiolitic. Once these tectonic fragments are recognized as remnants of ancient oceanic lithosphere, great progress shall be made in understanding early Earth history. We discuss the significance and implications of the Precambrian ophiolite record to constrain the mode and nature of the plate tectonics that operated in deep time.