Abstract

The Antigonish sub-basin lies within the late Paleozoic Maritimes Basin of Atlantic Canada. Late Devonian to early Carboniferous basin development resulted in a basin-and-range topography, within which the clastic Horton Group was deposited in grabens and half-grabens. The overlying Visean Windsor Group contains substantial evaporite units; later basin development was accompanied by expulsion of these evaporites. In the Antigonish sub-basin a significant stratigraphic omission surface initially described as a thrust was subsequently reinterpreted as the extensional Ainslie Detachment. This surface can be examined in drill-core, where the halite-bearing interval is reduced to 3.8 m of halite-cemented breccia of sedimentary rock fragments. The halite cement is sub-horizontally foliated and lineated. At Lakevale an outcrop section of the Windsor Group is reduced in thickness to tens of metres. Above a basal limestone unit containing pseudomorphs of gypsum, most of the Windsor Group is represented by sedimentary-clast breccias which resemble those seen in core, but with the halite removed by solution in the near-surface environment. The stratigraphic record within the sub-basin implies that expulsion of lower Windsor salt was initially toward the edges of the basin where rising diapirs blocked the deposition of Middle Windsor group, but in the basin centre a second salt unit was deposited. Subsequently, during contractional inversion of basin-bounding faults, the middle Windsor salt was expelled into diapirs near the centre of the basin. The Ainslie Detachment is reinterpreted as a primary salt weld: a boundary between units formerly above and below expelled lower Windsor evaporites. The resulting stratigraphic omissions and structures match those seen above expelled evaporite layers on continental margins.

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