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Roback et al. 1994
Roback, R.C., Sevigny, J.H. and Walker, N.W. (1994). Tectonic setting of the Slide Mountain terrane, southern British Columbia. Tectonics 13: doi: 10.1029/94TC01032. issn: 0278-7407.

The Slide Mountain terrane (SMT) in southern British Columbia consists of rocks of continental and oceanic affinity that are juxtaposed with parautochthonous rocks of the North American continental margin. In southern British Columbia, SMT consists dominantly of fine-grained quartzose clastic rocks, limestone and lesser amounts of conglomerate and volcanic rocks of the Carboniferous McHardy assemblage, and predominantly mafic volcanic rocks of the Permian Kaslo Group. U-Pb ages of individual detrital zircons from the McHardy assemblage are 1.7 Ga to 3.1 Ga and are similar to published ages of zircons from sedimentary rocks of the adjacent Kootenay terrane and the North American continental margin. These data and the petrology of McHardy assemblage sandstones and conglomerate suggest Kootenay terrane and the North American miogeocline as sources for McHardy assemblage detritus. U-Pb zircon ages of granitoid clasts within McHardy assemblage conglomerate indicate that Silurian granitic rocks also provided detritus to the SMT. Mafic volcanic, ultramagic, and sedimentary rocks of the Kaslo Group conformably overlie the McHardy assemblage. New geochemical data demonstrate that the Kaslo Group consists of light rare earth element depleted basalts.

On the basis of geochemical and geologic data, we suggest that Kaslo Group volcanics were erupted within an ocean ridge proximal to the North American continental margin and probably represent the eastern (continental) margin of a Permian marginal basin. Lithologic, stratigraphic, and U-Pb geochronologic data suggest that the SMT was deposited on autochthonous, distal miogeoclinal rocks of the adjacent western North American craton and in close proximity to an early Paleozoic arc terrane. We infer that correlative late Paleozoic basinal terranes in western North American were deposited in a similar tectonic setting. ¿ American Geophysical Union 1994

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Abstract

Keywords
Geochemistry, Geochronology, Mineralogy and Petrology, Major element composition, Mineralogy and Petrology, Minor and trace element composition
Journal
Tectonics
Publisher
American Geophysical Union
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