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Taconic orogeny

The Taconic orogeny was a mountain building period that ended 440 million years ago (Ma) and affected most of modern-day New England. A great mountain chain formed from eastern Canada down through what is now the Piedmont of the east coast of the United States. As the mountain chain eroded in the Silurian and Devonian periods, sediment spread throughout the present-day Appalachians and midcontinental North America.[1]

Illustration of the Taconic orogeny

New England and Canada edit

Beginning in Cambrian time, about 550 Ma, the Iapetus Ocean began to close. The weight of accumulating sediments, in addition to compressional forces in the crust, forced the eastern edge of the North American continent to fold gradually downward.[2] In this manner, shallow-water carbonate deposition that had persisted on the continental shelf margin through late Cambrian into early Ordovician time, gave way to fine-grained clastic deposition and deeper water conditions during the middle Ordovician. In this period a convergent plate boundary developed along the eastern edge of a small island chain. Crustal material beneath the Iapetus Ocean sank into the mantle along a subduction zone with an eastward-dipping orientation.[2] Dewatering of the down-going plate led to hydration of the peridotites in the overlying mantle wedge, lowering their melting point. This led to partial melting of the peridotites within the mantle wedge producing magma that returned to the surface to form the offshore Taconic (or Bronson Hill) island arc.

By the Late Ordovician, this island arc had collided with the North American continent. The sedimentary and igneous rock between the land masses were intensely folded and faulted and were subjected to varying degrees of metamorphism. This was the final episode of the Taconic orogeny.[1] Cameron's Line is the suture zone that is modern-day evidence of the collision of the island arc and the continent.[3] Cameron's Line winds southward out of New England into western Connecticut and passes through southern New York across the Bronx, following the general trend of the East River. It extends beneath sedimentary cover on Staten Island and southward beneath the coastal plain of New Jersey. In general, basement rocks to the west of Cameron's Line are regarded as autochthonous, meaning that they have not been significantly displaced by tectonic processes. The rocks to the west of Cameron's Line include metamorphosed sedimentary material originally comprising ancient continental slope, rise, and shelf deposits. The rocks to the east of Cameron's Line are allochthonous, which means they have been shoved westward over autochthonous basement rocks on the order of many tens or even hundreds of kilometers. These rocks were originally deposited as sediments in a deep water basin. Cameron's Line represents the trace of a subduction zone that ceased when the Taconic island arc collided with, and became accreted onto, the eastern margin of North America. Many of the rocks east of Cameron's Line were once part of the floor of the Iapetus Ocean.[2]

When the Taconic orogeny subsided during the late Ordovician (about 440 Ma), subduction ended, culminating in the accretion of the Iapetus Terrane onto the eastern margin of the continent. This resulted in the formation of a great mountain range throughout New England and eastern Canada, and perhaps to a lesser degree, southward along the region that is now the Piedmont of eastern North America. The expanded continental margin gradually stabilized. Erosion continued to strip away sediments from upland areas. Inland seas covering the midcontinent gradually expanded eastward into the New York Bight region and became the site of shallow clastic and carbonate deposition. This tectonically quiet period persisted until the late Devonian (about 360 Ma) when the next period of mountain-building began, the Acadian orogeny.[1]

Southern Appalachians edit

In the southern Appalachians of Alabama, Georgia, and North Carolina, the Taconic orogeny was not associated with collision of an island arc with ancient North America (Laurentia). Geologists working in these areas have long puzzled over the "missing" arc terrane typical of Taconic-aged rocks in New England and Canada.[4] Instead, the Iapetus margin of this part of Laurentia appears to have faced a back-arc basin during the Ordovician, suggesting that Iapetus oceanic crust was subducted beneath Laurentia—unlike the New England and Canadian segments of the margin, where Laurentia was on the subducting plate.[5][6]

In contrast to the Ordovician geologic history of New England, rocks in Alabama, Georgia, Tennessee, and North Carolina—including those of the Dahlonega gold belt[7] (Georgia and North Carolina), Talladega belt[8][9] (Alabama and Georgia), and eastern Blue Ridge (Georgia, Tennessee, and North Carolina)—are not typical of a volcanic arc in its strictest sense.[10] Instead, these rocks have geochemical and other characteristics typical of back-arc basins, which form behind the volcanic arc on the overriding plate.[5][6] The presence of these early-middle Ordovician (480 - 460 million year old) back-arc basin rocks in direct or faulted contact with rocks of the Laurentian shelf and slope-rise in the southern Appalachians suggests they were built on the margin of Laurentia, beyond the edge of the continental shelf-slope break.[9]

In the southern Appalachians, the Ordovician Laurentian margin probably resembled that seen in the modern Sea of Japan, with the continental mainland separated from a volcanic arc by a narrow, "marginal" seaway. Other lines of evidence supporting a back-arc, Sea of Japan-style tectonic model for the Taconic orogeny in the southern Appalachians include mixing of Ordovician and Grenville (ca. 1 billion year old) detrital zircons in metamorphosed sedimentary sequences, and interlayering of metamorphosed Ordovician volcanic rocks with sedimentary rocks derived from the Laurentian margin.[5][6]

Relation with the Famatinian orogeny edit

It has been suggested that the coeval Famatinian orogeny in western Gondwana (South America) is the "southward" continuation of the Taconic orogeny.[note 1] This has been explained by adding that Laurentia could have collided with western Gondwana in early Paleozoic times during the closure of the Iapetus Ocean.[11] According to this view the Cuyania terrane would be an allochthonous block of Laurentian origin that was left in Gondwana. But such views are challenged since Cuyania is alternatively suggested to have drifted across Iapetus Ocean as a microcontinent starting in Laurentia and accreting then to Gondwana. A third model claims Cuyania is para-autochthonous and arrived at its current place by strike-slip faults starting not from Laurentia but from Gondwana.[12]

Aftermath edit

As the Taconic orogeny subsided in early Silurian time, uplifts and folds in the Hudson Valley region were beveled by erosion. Upon this surface sediments began to accumulate, derived from remaining uplifts in the New England region. The evidence for this is the Silurian Shawangunk Conglomerate, a massive, ridge-forming quartz sandstone and conglomerate formation, which rests unconformably on a surface of older gently- to steeply-dipping pre-Silurian age strata throughout the region. This ridge of Shawangunk Conglomerate extends southward from the Hudson Valley along the eastern front of the Catskills. It forms the impressive caprock ridge of the Shawangunk Mountains west of New Paltz. To the south and west it becomes the prominent ridge-forming unit that crops out along the crest of Kittatinny Mountain in New Jersey.[2]

Through Silurian time, the deposition of coarse alluvial sediments gave way to shallow marine fine-grained muds, and eventually to clear-water carbonate sediment accumulation with reefs formed from the accumulation of calcareous algae and the skeletal remains of coral, stromatoporoids, brachiopods, and other ancient marine fauna. The episodic eustatic rise and fall of sea level caused depositional environments to change or to shift laterally. As a result, the preserved faunal remains and the character and composition of the sedimentary layers deposited in any particular location varied through time. The textural or compositional variations of the strata, as well as the changing fossil fauna preserved, are used to define the numerous sedimentary formations of Silurian through Devonian age preserved throughout the region.[2]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ In other words what is at present the southern end of the Taconic orogeny would have been connected with what is currently the northern end of the Famatinian orogeny.

References edit

  1. ^ a b c   This article incorporates public domain material from . United States Geological Survey.
  2. ^ a b c d e   This article incorporates public domain material from . United States Geological Survey.
  3. ^ Schneider, Daniel B. (August 22, 1999). "F.Y.I." New York Times. Retrieved 1 May 2010.
  4. ^ Staal, C. R. van; Whalen, J. B.; McNicoll, V. J.; Pehrsson, S.; Lissenberg, C. J.; Zagorevski, A.; Breemen, O. van; Jenner, G. A. (2007-01-01). "The Notre Dame arc and the Taconic orogeny in Newfoundland". Geological Society of America Memoirs. 200: 511–552. doi:10.1130/2007.1200(26). ISBN 978-0-8137-1200-0. ISSN 0072-1069.
  5. ^ a b c Tull, James; Holm-Denoma, Christopher S.; Barineau, Clinton I. (2014-07-01). "Early to Middle Ordovician back-arc basin in the southern Appalachian Blue Ridge: Characteristics, extent, and tectonic significance". Geological Society of America Bulletin. 126 (7–8): 990–1015. Bibcode:2014GSAB..126..990T. doi:10.1130/B30967.1. ISSN 0016-7606.
  6. ^ a b c Barineau, Clinton; Tull, James F.; Holm-Denoma, Christopher S. (2015-03-01). "A Laurentian margin back-arc: The Ordovician Wedowee-Emuckfaw-Dahlonega basin". Field Guides. 39: 21–78. doi:10.1130/2015.0039(02). ISBN 978-0-8137-0039-7. ISSN 2333-0937.
  7. ^ German, Jerry M. (1989-07-01). . Economic Geology. 84 (4): 903–923. Bibcode:1989EcGeo..84..903G. doi:10.2113/gsecongeo.84.4.903. ISSN 0361-0128. Archived from the original on 2019-09-13. Retrieved 2016-08-21.
  8. ^ Tull, James F.; Barineau, Clinton I.; Mueller, Paul A.; Wooden, Joseph L. (2007-03-01). (PDF). Geological Society of America Bulletin. 119 (3–4): 261–274. Bibcode:2007GSAB..119..261T. doi:10.1130/B25998.1. ISSN 0016-7606. S2CID 130204532. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2020-02-20.
  9. ^ a b Tull, James F.; Barineau, Clinton I. (2012-10-01). "Overview of the stratigraphic and structural evolution of the Talladega slate belt, Alabama Appalachians". Field Guides. 29: 263–302. doi:10.1130/2012.0029(08). ISBN 978-0-8137-0029-8. ISSN 2333-0937.
  10. ^ Holm-Denoma, Christopher S.; Das, Reshmi (2010-07-01). "Bimodal volcanism as evidence for Paleozoic extensional accretionary tectonism in the southern Appalachians". Geological Society of America Bulletin. 122 (7–8): 1220–1234. Bibcode:2010GSAB..122.1220H. doi:10.1130/B30051.1. ISSN 0016-7606.
  11. ^ Dalla Salda, Luis H.; Dalziel, Ian W.D.; Cingolani, Carlos A.; Varela, Ricardo (1992). "Did the Taconic Appalachians continue into southern South America?". Geology. 20 (12): 1059–1062. Bibcode:1992Geo....20.1059D. doi:10.1130/0091-7613(1992)020<1059:dttaci>2.3.co;2. S2CID 128856492.
  12. ^ Vujovich, Graciela I.; van Staal, Cees R.; Davis, William (2004). "Age Constraints on the Tectonic Evolution and Provenance of the Pie de Palo Complex, Cuyania Composite Terrane, and the Famatinian Orogeny in the Sierra de Pie de Palo, San Juan, Argentina". Gondwana Research. 7 (4): 1041–1056. Bibcode:2004GondR...7.1041V. doi:10.1016/s1342-937x(05)71083-2. hdl:11336/93714.

taconic, orogeny, mountain, building, period, that, ended, million, years, affected, most, modern, england, great, mountain, chain, formed, from, eastern, canada, down, through, what, piedmont, east, coast, united, states, mountain, chain, eroded, silurian, de. The Taconic orogeny was a mountain building period that ended 440 million years ago Ma and affected most of modern day New England A great mountain chain formed from eastern Canada down through what is now the Piedmont of the east coast of the United States As the mountain chain eroded in the Silurian and Devonian periods sediment spread throughout the present day Appalachians and midcontinental North America 1 Illustration of the Taconic orogeny Contents 1 New England and Canada 2 Southern Appalachians 3 Relation with the Famatinian orogeny 4 Aftermath 5 See also 6 Notes 7 ReferencesNew England and Canada editBeginning in Cambrian time about 550 Ma the Iapetus Ocean began to close The weight of accumulating sediments in addition to compressional forces in the crust forced the eastern edge of the North American continent to fold gradually downward 2 In this manner shallow water carbonate deposition that had persisted on the continental shelf margin through late Cambrian into early Ordovician time gave way to fine grained clastic deposition and deeper water conditions during the middle Ordovician In this period a convergent plate boundary developed along the eastern edge of a small island chain Crustal material beneath the Iapetus Ocean sank into the mantle along a subduction zone with an eastward dipping orientation 2 Dewatering of the down going plate led to hydration of the peridotites in the overlying mantle wedge lowering their melting point This led to partial melting of the peridotites within the mantle wedge producing magma that returned to the surface to form the offshore Taconic or Bronson Hill island arc By the Late Ordovician this island arc had collided with the North American continent The sedimentary and igneous rock between the land masses were intensely folded and faulted and were subjected to varying degrees of metamorphism This was the final episode of the Taconic orogeny 1 Cameron s Line is the suture zone that is modern day evidence of the collision of the island arc and the continent 3 Cameron s Line winds southward out of New England into western Connecticut and passes through southern New York across the Bronx following the general trend of the East River It extends beneath sedimentary cover on Staten Island and southward beneath the coastal plain of New Jersey In general basement rocks to the west of Cameron s Line are regarded as autochthonous meaning that they have not been significantly displaced by tectonic processes The rocks to the west of Cameron s Line include metamorphosed sedimentary material originally comprising ancient continental slope rise and shelf deposits The rocks to the east of Cameron s Line are allochthonous which means they have been shoved westward over autochthonous basement rocks on the order of many tens or even hundreds of kilometers These rocks were originally deposited as sediments in a deep water basin Cameron s Line represents the trace of a subduction zone that ceased when the Taconic island arc collided with and became accreted onto the eastern margin of North America Many of the rocks east of Cameron s Line were once part of the floor of the Iapetus Ocean 2 When the Taconic orogeny subsided during the late Ordovician about 440 Ma subduction ended culminating in the accretion of the Iapetus Terrane onto the eastern margin of the continent This resulted in the formation of a great mountain range throughout New England and eastern Canada and perhaps to a lesser degree southward along the region that is now the Piedmont of eastern North America The expanded continental margin gradually stabilized Erosion continued to strip away sediments from upland areas Inland seas covering the midcontinent gradually expanded eastward into the New York Bight region and became the site of shallow clastic and carbonate deposition This tectonically quiet period persisted until the late Devonian about 360 Ma when the next period of mountain building began the Acadian orogeny 1 Southern Appalachians editIn the southern Appalachians of Alabama Georgia and North Carolina the Taconic orogeny was not associated with collision of an island arc with ancient North America Laurentia Geologists working in these areas have long puzzled over the missing arc terrane typical of Taconic aged rocks in New England and Canada 4 Instead the Iapetus margin of this part of Laurentia appears to have faced a back arc basin during the Ordovician suggesting that Iapetus oceanic crust was subducted beneath Laurentia unlike the New England and Canadian segments of the margin where Laurentia was on the subducting plate 5 6 In contrast to the Ordovician geologic history of New England rocks in Alabama Georgia Tennessee and North Carolina including those of the Dahlonega gold belt 7 Georgia and North Carolina Talladega belt 8 9 Alabama and Georgia and eastern Blue Ridge Georgia Tennessee and North Carolina are not typical of a volcanic arc in its strictest sense 10 Instead these rocks have geochemical and other characteristics typical of back arc basins which form behind the volcanic arc on the overriding plate 5 6 The presence of these early middle Ordovician 480 460 million year old back arc basin rocks in direct or faulted contact with rocks of the Laurentian shelf and slope rise in the southern Appalachians suggests they were built on the margin of Laurentia beyond the edge of the continental shelf slope break 9 In the southern Appalachians the Ordovician Laurentian margin probably resembled that seen in the modern Sea of Japan with the continental mainland separated from a volcanic arc by a narrow marginal seaway Other lines of evidence supporting a back arc Sea of Japan style tectonic model for the Taconic orogeny in the southern Appalachians include mixing of Ordovician and Grenville ca 1 billion year old detrital zircons in metamorphosed sedimentary sequences and interlayering of metamorphosed Ordovician volcanic rocks with sedimentary rocks derived from the Laurentian margin 5 6 Relation with the Famatinian orogeny editIt has been suggested that the coeval Famatinian orogeny in western Gondwana South America is the southward continuation of the Taconic orogeny note 1 This has been explained by adding that Laurentia could have collided with western Gondwana in early Paleozoic times during the closure of the Iapetus Ocean 11 According to this view the Cuyania terrane would be an allochthonous block of Laurentian origin that was left in Gondwana But such views are challenged since Cuyania is alternatively suggested to have drifted across Iapetus Ocean as a microcontinent starting in Laurentia and accreting then to Gondwana A third model claims Cuyania is para autochthonous and arrived at its current place by strike slip faults starting not from Laurentia but from Gondwana 12 Aftermath editAs the Taconic orogeny subsided in early Silurian time uplifts and folds in the Hudson Valley region were beveled by erosion Upon this surface sediments began to accumulate derived from remaining uplifts in the New England region The evidence for this is the Silurian Shawangunk Conglomerate a massive ridge forming quartz sandstone and conglomerate formation which rests unconformably on a surface of older gently to steeply dipping pre Silurian age strata throughout the region This ridge of Shawangunk Conglomerate extends southward from the Hudson Valley along the eastern front of the Catskills It forms the impressive caprock ridge of the Shawangunk Mountains west of New Paltz To the south and west it becomes the prominent ridge forming unit that crops out along the crest of Kittatinny Mountain in New Jersey 2 Through Silurian time the deposition of coarse alluvial sediments gave way to shallow marine fine grained muds and eventually to clear water carbonate sediment accumulation with reefs formed from the accumulation of calcareous algae and the skeletal remains of coral stromatoporoids brachiopods and other ancient marine fauna The episodic eustatic rise and fall of sea level caused depositional environments to change or to shift laterally As a result the preserved faunal remains and the character and composition of the sedimentary layers deposited in any particular location varied through time The textural or compositional variations of the strata as well as the changing fossil fauna preserved are used to define the numerous sedimentary formations of Silurian through Devonian age preserved throughout the region 2 See also editEbenezer Emmons the geologist who first described the Taconic system Queenston Delta a clastic wedge of sediment deposited west of the Taconics at that timeNotes edit In other words what is at present the southern end of the Taconic orogeny would have been connected with what is currently the northern end of the Famatinian orogeny References edit a b c nbsp This article incorporates public domain material from Valley and Ridge Province United States Geological Survey a b c d e nbsp This article incorporates public domain material from The Highlands Province United States Geological Survey Schneider Daniel B August 22 1999 F Y I New York Times Retrieved 1 May 2010 Staal C R van Whalen J B McNicoll V J Pehrsson S Lissenberg C J Zagorevski A Breemen O van Jenner G A 2007 01 01 The Notre Dame arc and the Taconic orogeny in Newfoundland Geological Society of America Memoirs 200 511 552 doi 10 1130 2007 1200 26 ISBN 978 0 8137 1200 0 ISSN 0072 1069 a b c Tull James Holm Denoma Christopher S Barineau Clinton I 2014 07 01 Early to Middle Ordovician back arc basin in the southern Appalachian Blue Ridge Characteristics extent and tectonic significance Geological Society of America Bulletin 126 7 8 990 1015 Bibcode 2014GSAB 126 990T doi 10 1130 B30967 1 ISSN 0016 7606 a b c Barineau Clinton Tull James F Holm Denoma Christopher S 2015 03 01 A Laurentian margin back arc The Ordovician Wedowee Emuckfaw Dahlonega basin Field Guides 39 21 78 doi 10 1130 2015 0039 02 ISBN 978 0 8137 0039 7 ISSN 2333 0937 German Jerry M 1989 07 01 Geologic setting and genesis of gold deposits of the Dahlonega and Carroll County gold belts Georgia Economic Geology 84 4 903 923 Bibcode 1989EcGeo 84 903G doi 10 2113 gsecongeo 84 4 903 ISSN 0361 0128 Archived from the original on 2019 09 13 Retrieved 2016 08 21 Tull James F Barineau Clinton I Mueller Paul A Wooden Joseph L 2007 03 01 Volcanic arc emplacement onto the southernmost Appalachian Laurentian shelf Characteristics and constraints PDF Geological Society of America Bulletin 119 3 4 261 274 Bibcode 2007GSAB 119 261T doi 10 1130 B25998 1 ISSN 0016 7606 S2CID 130204532 Archived from the original PDF on 2020 02 20 a b Tull James F Barineau Clinton I 2012 10 01 Overview of the stratigraphic and structural evolution of the Talladega slate belt Alabama Appalachians Field Guides 29 263 302 doi 10 1130 2012 0029 08 ISBN 978 0 8137 0029 8 ISSN 2333 0937 Holm Denoma Christopher S Das Reshmi 2010 07 01 Bimodal volcanism as evidence for Paleozoic extensional accretionary tectonism in the southern Appalachians Geological Society of America Bulletin 122 7 8 1220 1234 Bibcode 2010GSAB 122 1220H doi 10 1130 B30051 1 ISSN 0016 7606 Dalla Salda Luis H Dalziel Ian W D Cingolani Carlos A Varela Ricardo 1992 Did the Taconic Appalachians continue into southern South America Geology 20 12 1059 1062 Bibcode 1992Geo 20 1059D doi 10 1130 0091 7613 1992 020 lt 1059 dttaci gt 2 3 co 2 S2CID 128856492 Vujovich Graciela I van Staal Cees R Davis William 2004 Age Constraints on the Tectonic Evolution and Provenance of the Pie de Palo Complex Cuyania Composite Terrane and the Famatinian Orogeny in the Sierra de Pie de Palo San Juan Argentina Gondwana Research 7 4 1041 1056 Bibcode 2004GondR 7 1041V doi 10 1016 s1342 937x 05 71083 2 hdl 11336 93714 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Taconic orogeny amp oldid 1207330720, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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