Abstract

Major environmental changes during the Great Oxidation Episode are recorded in 2.5–2.0 Ga sedimentary successions across the world. In North America, the Huronian Supergroup is the most complete succession, preserving three glacial intervals with possible equivalents in the Lake Superior region. The third and youngest glacial unit (Gowganda Formation, Cobalt Group) of the Huronian Supergroup has been correlated with glacial deposits of the Chocolay Group in the Lake Superior region. Here we present the results of in situ SHRIMP U-Pb geochronology of zircon in thin tuff layers from the basal Wewe Slate, Chocolay Group, from drill-core in the Marquette Range area, upper Michigan. Zircon U-Pb data from two intervals ∼16 m apart yielded weighted mean 207Pb/206Pb ages of 2174 ± 9 Ma and 2172 ± 6 Ma, which define the depositional ages of the Wewe Slate and the conformably underlying Kona Dolomite. In the Huronian Supergroup, SHRIMP U-Pb dating of zircon in a tuff bed from the Gordon Lake Formation, Cobalt Group, yielded a weighted mean 207Pb/206Pb age of 2318 ± 8 Ma, interpreted to be the age of deposition. Re-examination of previously published U-Pb zircon data from the Gordon Lake Formation (Rasmussen et al., 2013) yields a slightly older weighted mean 207Pb/206Pb age of 2310 ± 5 Ma. Our results show that the Wewe Slate, and probably the Kona Dolomite, are ∼150 million years younger than the ∼2.32 Ga Gordon Lake Formation, with which they were previously correlated. Our results suggest that the glacial deposits in the Lake Superior region represent a fourth Paleoproterozoic glaciation in North America, whose age range corresponds to that of the fourth and final early Paleoproterozoic glaciation in southern Africa. We propose that the Chocolay Group was deposited after the Huronian Supergroup and is broadly coeval with the rift-passive margin succession (Cycle 1 of the Kaniapiskau Supergroup) in the New Québec Orogen, Canada, whose deposition has been linked to rifting and breakup along the eastern margin of the Superior craton at ∼2.22 Ga.

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