Abstract

Palaeomagnetic data from Permian, Triassic and Jurassic bedded rocks, to which attitudinal corrections can be applied, yield palaeolatitudes concordant with those of ancestral North America, but very large predominantly anticlockwise rotations about vertical axes. Data from Cretaceous rocks yield apparent palaeolatitudinal displacements that increase westward. Small or negligible displacements are obtained from the Omineca Belt. Intermediate displacements (1000-2000 km) from the Intermontane Belt, are based on data from Cretaceous bedded sequences. Further to the west in the Coast Belt, larger apparent displacements (greater than 2000 km) have been obtained from plutons for which no attitudinal control is yet available. Data from Eocene rocks are concordant. Possibilities to consider are as follows: (a) little or no displacement and tilting to the southwest at about 30°; (b) large (greater than 2000 km in the Coast Belt) northward displacement since mid-Cretaceous time preceded by southward displacement of comparable magnitude in Juro-Cretaceous time; (c) lesser (1000-2000 km) overall displacement coupled with variable and lesser tilts to the south and southeast of plutons of the Coast Belt. Under hypothesis (a) the western Cordillera was formed and has remained in approximately its present position relative to ancestral North America; data from bedded volcanics of the Intermontane Belt are not consistent with this hypothesis. From the evidence currently available we favour hypotheses (b) or (c), although more data from bedded sequences are required. It is noteworthy that hypotheses (a) and (c) predict tilt directions that differ by about 90° and hence ought to be distinguishable by geological studies.

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