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Document Description
Title
Geology
,
distribution
and
geochemistry
of
impact
melt
at the
Mistastin
lake
impact
crater
,
Labrador
Author
Marion
,
Cassandra
Lorraine
,
1982-
Description
Thesis
(M.Sc.)--Memorial
University
of
Newfoundland
,
2009.
Earth
Sciences
Date
2009.
Pagination
xv, 1 v. (various foliations) : ill., maps. (chiefly col.)
Subject
Geochemistry--Newfoundland
and
Labrador--Mistastin
Lake
region;
Geochronometry--Newfoundland
and
Labrador--Mistastin
Lake
region;
Geology--Newfoundland
and
Labrador--Mistastin
Lake
region;
Metamorphic
rocks--Newfoundland
and
Labrador--Mistastin
Lake
region;
Meteorite
craters--Newfoundland
and
Labrador--Mistastin
Lake
region;
Labrador
Degree
M.Sc.
Degree Grantor
Memorial University of Newfoundland. Dept. of Earth Sciences
Discipline
Earth Sciences
Language
Eng
Spatial Coverage
Canada--Newfoundland and Labrador--Labrador--Mistastin Lake Region
Notes
Includes
bibliographical
references
(leaves
R1-R9)
Abstract
The
Mistastin
Lake
crater
in
Labrador
,
Canada
(55°53'N;
63°18'W)
contains
a
3
km
wide
central
uplift
within
a
19
x
12
km
wide
lake
and has a
rim
diameter
of28
km.
The
projectile
impacted
Mesoproterozoic
crystalline
target
rocks
approximately
36
Ma
ago.
--
This
study
consists
of
detailed
field
observations;
geology
,
geochemistry
, and
geochronology
of
impact
melt
and
target
rocks
of the
Mistastin
impact
crater.
To
determine
(1)
the
significance
of the
relationship
between
preserved
melt
thickness
and
vesicularity
in the
melt
rocks;
(2)
the
scale
and
origin
of
compositional
heterogeneities
in
impact
melts
produced
in
craters
of
moderate
size
and the
relationship
between
entrained
mineral
clasts
and
impact
melt
composition;
and
(3)
the
origin
of
zircon
clasts
in the
impact
melts.
--
Melt
rocks
that are
distributed
around
two
thirds
of the
lake
in
patchy
outcrops
vary
in
thickness
from
<1m
to
80
m.
Previous
estimates
suggested
that a
coherent
melt
sheet
up
10
200m
thick
formed
in the
crater
and that the
much
smaller
preserved
unit
thicknesses
are the
result
of
glacial
erosion.
New
field
observations
and
laboratory
measurements
identify
a
relationship
between
distribution
,
thickness
and
vesicularity
of
melt
rock
units.
The
thickest
melt-rock
occurrence
, at
Discovery
Hill
,
is
massive
,
crystalline
,
non-vesicular
and
80
m
thick.
In
contrast
,
1-2
m
thick
melt-rock
occurrences
elsewhere
in the
crater
are
glassy
and
vesicular.
Measured
vesicularities
vary
from
0.1
to
31
%
and
follow
an
empirical
relationship
([varphi]
=
30±2
h
-0.8±0.1
)
whereby
vesicularity
[varphi]
increases
with
decreasing
melt
rock
thickness
h.
Plagioclase
microlite
crystallization
temperatures
of
thin
melt
rock
outcrops
are
very
high
(>
1300
°C)
,
indicating
rapid
cooling
rates.
Lower
crystallization
temperatures
(∼1245
°C)
for the
Discovery
Hill
melt
are
consistent
with
slower
cooling
rates.
The
data
suggest
that the
pre-erosional
melt
sheet
at
Mistastin
was not
uniform
and
,
consequently
,
previous
estimates
for the
level
of
erosion
and the
volume
of the
melt
produced
have been
overestimated.
--
Target
rocks
which
contributed
to the
impact
melt
consist
principally
of
anorthosite
,
mangerite
and
granodiorite.
Chemical
compositions
of
bulk
samples
of
thirty-three
melt
rocks
and
fourteen
target
rocks
were
measured
by
XRF
and
SN-ICPMS.
Matrix
compositions
of
nine
samples
of
impact
melt
rocks
were
determined
by
EPMA
and
LA-ICPMS.
Zircon
grains
from
four
samples
of
target
rock
and
zircon
clasts
from
three
samples
of
impact
melt
rock
were
measured
for
multi-element
composition
,
U-Pb
age
and
Hf-isotopic
composition
by
LA-(MC)-ICPMS.
--
The
data
reveal
compositional
heterogeneities
in the
impact
melts
on the
scales
of
both
bulk
samples
and
matrices.
Bulk
samples
can
be
divided
into
compositions
with
high
and
low
concentrations
of
high-field
strength
elements
(HFSE;
Ti
,
Zr
,
Nb)
and
Fe
,
Ba
,
Ce
and
Y.
High
HFSE-type
melt
rocks
formed
when
impact
melt
entrained
large
quantities
of
clasts
from
mangerite
,
which
is
rich
in
HFSE.
Matrix
compositions
of
bulk
samples
do
not
show
the
HFSE
distinction
but are
affected
by the
introduction
of
low-temperature
melts
from the
clasts
to
form
dispersed
,
micron-scale
silica-rich
heterogeneities.
Both
clast
entrainment
and
melting
are
more
extensive
for the
thicker
flow
units
which
had a
higher
heat
capacity
for
melting
and
cooled
more
slowly
than
thinner
flows.
--
The
best
estimate
of the
sources
of the
initial
impact
melt
is
∼73%
anorthosite
,
∼7%
mangerite
and
∼20%
granodiorite
,
based
on
least-squares
modeling
of
major
element
compositions
of the
matrices
of
thinner
flows.
Zircon
derived
from
anorthosite
can
be
distinguished
from
zircon
from
mangerite
and
granodiorite
on the
basis
of
higher
Nb/Ta
and
Eu/Eu*
ratios
and
more
negative
initial
[varepsilon]
Hf
values.
Zircon
clasts
greater
than
40
microns
in
size
in the
impact
melt
rocks
are
dominantly
or
exclusively
derived
from
mangerite
and
granodiorite.
Hence
zircon
may
be a
poor
provenance
indicator
for
target
rock
contributors
to
impact
melts.
Type
Text
Resource Type
Electronic
thesis
or
dissertation
Format
Image/jpeg;
Application/pdf
Source
Paper copy kept in the Centre for Newfoundland Studies, Memorial University Libraries
Local Identifier
a3243694
Rights
The author retains copyright ownership and moral rights in this thesis. Neither the thesis nor substantial extracts from it may be printed or otherwise reproduced without the author's permission.
Collection
Electronic
Theses
and
Dissertations
Scanning Status
Completed
PDF File
(27.36
MB)
--
http://collections.mun.ca/PDFs/theses/Marion_CassandraLorraine.pdf
CONTENTdm file name
57450.cpd