Abstract

The Georgian Bay transect forms an important geological section across the deeply exhumed Central Gneiss Belt of the Ontario Grenville Province. Its geological mapping was one of Nick Culshaw’s major research contributions, but the tectonic structure of the southern part of this transect in the Go Home region was never properly established. New Nd isotope data show that the classically recognized Go Home domain should be divided into three structural “decks” with distinct TDM (depleted mantle) Nd model ages. The upper deck consists of the Pine Island and Honey Harbour domains, with TDM ages averaging 1.56 and 1.57 Ga, respectively, which form two isolated units of the Grenvillian allochthonous belt. These are underlain by the newly-recognized Six Mile Lake domain, whose average TDM age of 1.71 Ga is representative of the tectonic duplex entrained elsewhere onto the base of the allochthon. Finally, the lowermost deck yields an average TDM age of 1.87 Ga, which identifies it as part of the Grenvillian parautochthon, exposed here in a tectonic window. The presence of a large retrogressed eclogite body within the allochthonous Honey Harbour domain confirms the exhumation of this unit from the deep crust on a major structural ramp. The coherent boundaries of these domains are consistent with the ramp–flat thrusting model of the Ottawan (Grenvillian) orogeny and limit the action of later extensional tectonics in the southwest Grenville Province.

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