Abstract
New geochemical data including Sm/Nd isotopic data show evidence for an early Paleozoic arc/back-arc complex in the Nashoba terrane of southeastern New England. The Nashoba terrane lies between rocks of Ganderian affinity to the northwest and Avalonian affinity to the southeast. It consists of early Paleozoic mafic to felsic metavolcanic and metasedimentary rocks that were intruded by intermediate to felsic plutons and metamorphosed to upper amphibolite facies conditions in the mid-Paleozoic. Major and trace element geochemical data indicate that the early Paleozoic igneous rocks contain a mix of arc, MORB, and alkaline signatures, and that the terrane formed as a primitive volcanic arc/back-arc complex built on thinned continental crust. Amphibolites have +4 to +7.5eNd(500) values consistent with formation in a primitive volcanic arc with minimal crustal contamination. Intermediate and felsic gneisses have eNd(500) values between +1.2 and –0.75 indicating a mixture of juvenile arc magmas and an evolved (likely basement) source. Depleted mantle model ages of 1.2 to 1.6 Ga point to a Mesoproterozoic or older age for this source. Metasedimentary rocks yielded –6 to –8.3 eNd(500) values and 1.6 to 1.8 Ga model ages, indicating an isotopically evolved source (or sources) that included Paleoproterozoic or older material. The eNd(500) values and model ages of the intermediate and felsic and metasedimentary rocks indicate that the basement to the Nashoba terrane is Ganderian rather than Avalonian. The Nashoba terrane therefore represents a Ganderian arc/back-arc complex similar to the Cambrian Penobscot arc/back-arc seen in Maritime Canada and Newfoundland, and particularly in the Annidale and New River terranes of southern New Brunswick. This correlation has not previously been recognized in southeastern New England. The Ganderian affinity of the Nashoba terrane also extends Ganderia farther SE in New England than previously established and indicates that the Nashoba terrane did not originate as a separate oceanic arc/back-arc complex or microcontinent.
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