Abstract

Abstract The eastern Dunnage Zone of the central Newfoundland Appalachians hosts Paleozoic orogenic gold mineralization along a northeast-trending, crustal-scale fault corridor that extends for more than 200 km. This orogenic gold system is characterized by polyphase, structurally controlled, quartz vein systems that cut Neoproterozoic granitoid rocks and unconformably overlying syntectonic, polymict conglomerate and associated transitional to calc-alkaline bimodal igneous rocks. High-precision chemical abrasion–isotope dilution–thermal ionization mass spectrometry (CA-ID-TIMS) U-Pb geochronology confirms a widespread, latest Silurian magmatic pulse (422–420 Ma) that is attributed to a transient phase of lithospheric extension resulting from asthenospheric and crustal melting related to slab break-off. Syntectonic conglomerate was deposited as a basal unit during extension-related uplift and erosion that lasted until ca. 418 Ma in north-central Newfoundland. Orogenic gold mineralization associated with syntectonic sedimentation and magmatism is hosted within third-order shear vein systems that form offshoots within a triangle zone–like structural corridor between southeast- and northwest-dipping, second-order fault splays and shear zones. The southeast-dipping fault system formed during northwest migration of the Acadian thrust front, whereas the northwest-dipping faults and shear zones are Salinic structures that were reactivated in the Early Devonian. Primary hydrothermal rutile in the orogenic gold-mineralized quartz veins produced ages of ca. 410 Ma. These ages are consistent with quartz vein emplacement and orogenic gold mineralization as a result of hydrothermal fluid-pressure cycling related to far-field compression and thermal perturbations during the Early Devonian Acadian orogenic cycle. The setting and process evolution of the central Newfoundland gold district are remarkably similar to that of world-class orogenic gold systems of the Canadian Shield.

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