Abstract

The Northern Canadian Cordilleran Miogeocline developed intermittently during the early Paleozoic and hosts alkalic and ultrapotassic volcanic rocks that are spatially restricted in thin beds and lenses and isolated volcanic piles. On the basis of geochemistry and geographic location, these volcanic rocks are subdivided into five main groups. Group I rocks (Porter Puddle and Macmillan rocks) are potassic basanites characterized by high Nb, Ce, and NbIY and low ZrINb. They are chemically similar to the Mountain Diatreme, indicating a genetic link. Group 11 rocks (Porter Puddle, Niddery, and Macmillan rocks) are also potassic but have lower abundances of Nb and Ce, higher ZrINb, and lower NbIY. Group I11 rocks (Vulcan and Itsi Lakes) are also potassic but are chemically variable, have lower contents of high field strength elements (HFSE) than the groups I and I1 rocks, and contain elevated Ba contents. Groups 1-111 are characterized by mica (biotite and phlogopite) phenocrysts, sanidine, augite, and Ba-feldspar, a mineral assemblage typical of ultrapotassic lavas. Group IV (Whale Mountain) alkali basalts are the least enriched in the large ion lithophile elements and have relatively low contents of HFSE compared with Groups I and I1 basalts. Groups I-111 are consistent with partial melting of a previously metasomatized lithospheric mantle that was variably enriched in Ba, Nb, and Ce, whereas the group IV rocks are more typical of asthenospherically derived oceanic island basalt partial melts. The geochemistry of the volcanic rocks is consistent with paleotectonic models of the Selwyn Basin. The Selwyn Basin is a passive continental rift that underwent episodic extension and associated subsidence throughout the lower Paleozoic. Alkalic volcanism, and spatially and temporally associated Ba and base metal mineralization, is concentrated along rift-parallel normal faults, particularly where these faults are offset by transform faults.

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