Abstract

Mafic dykes of different ages were collected from three different tectonic settings and analyzed using anisotropy of magnetic susceptibility (AMS) as a proxy for magmatic flow during intrusion. In Iceland, ridge-parallel basaltic dykes were sampled on each side of the active tectonic boundary. The dykes are < 10 m wide along a 1–2 km strike, and are the result of a single intrusion from 1–2 km deep magma chambers in oceanic crust. Thirteen samples were collected (7 N. American plate; 6 European) and 153 cores were analyzed by AMS and preserve a vertical K max orientation indicating vertical emplacement. The Eocene Aishihik dyke swarm intrudes the Yukon–Tanana terrane in the Yukon province, Canada over an area ~ 200 by 60 km. These dykes were intruded normal to the accretionary margin, are porphyritic andesites, and have an intermediate geochemical signature based on major and trace element analyses. Ten dykes were sampled and 111 cores analyzed using AMS, and the dykes preserve a vertical K max orientation, indicating intrusion was vertical through ~ 30 km of continental crust. The 2.06 Ga Kenora–Kabetogama dykes in northern Minnesota and western Ontario crosscut a variety of Archean terranes (thickness ~ 50 km) in a radiating pattern. The unmetamorphosed basaltic dykes are 1–120 m wide, 10–110 km in length, are vertical in orientation and can be grouped as either being single intrusion or multiple intrusion (composite) dykes. AMS data preserve a vertical K max orientation for the southerly locations (2 dykes, n = 53) and horizontal K max for the remainder to the northwest (15 dykes, n = 194). Maximum magnetic susceptibility axes (4 dykes, n = 92) for composite dykes are scattered and yield inconsistent flow directions with regard to the dyke margin. Almost all of our results are “normal” in that, the magnetic foliation (the plane containing K max and K int, normal to K min) is parallel to the dyke planes, which gives us confidence that the magnetic lineations (i.e., K max orientations) are parallel to magmatic flow.

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