Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
10121340 | Physics of the Earth and Planetary Interiors | 2005 | 21 Pages |
Abstract
The exceptionally large MT database for the western Superior Province provides a three-dimensional sampling of the resistivity structure. In this paper, the primary MT responses from the data set, including geoelectric strike, apparent resistivity and phase, are used to define first-order geoelectrical structures in the region. Apparent resistivity responses indicate the ca 3.0Â Ga North Caribou terrane contains extremely resistive crust. Crust to the south, accreted at ca. 2.7Â Ga, is significantly more conductive, with resistivities similar to in the southeast Superior Province. The results suggest that the supracrustal component of the North Caribou terrane provides minimal enhancement of the crustal conductivity. At the southern margin of the former North Caribou superterrane, induction arrows define a conductivity anomaly that extends in an east-west direction for at least 600Â km and causes a reversal of arrows in a region 100-200Â km wide. This anomaly is interpreted to be caused by a conductive component of the 2.7Â Ga metasedimentary rocks of the English River subprovince. The observations demonstrate the ability of electromagnetic methods to map some Neoarchean continental margins. In the southwest Superior Province, geoelectric strike azimuths for periods corresponding to signal penetration into the upper mantle are aligned with the trend of subprovince boundaries and are interpreted to be related to fossil structure in the mantle lithosphere. This result provides support to the interpretation that the lithospheric mantle of the western Superior Province has remained intact since the 2.7Â Ga accretion of the subprovinces. The MT responses from the western Superior Province have thus defined a number of large-scale resistivity structures providing information on tectonic structure and history, and confirming the value of electromagnetic imaging of Archean lithosphere.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Earth and Planetary Sciences
Geophysics
Authors
I.J. Ferguson, J.A. Craven, R.D. Kurtz, D.E. Boerner, R.C. Bailey, X. Wu, M.R. Orellana, J. Spratt, G. Wennberg, M. Norton,