Abstract:
The study area is situated in NE Newfoundland between
Gander Lake and the north coast and on the boundary between
the Gander and Botwood tectonostratigraphic zones (Williams
et al., 1974).
The area is underlain by three NE trending units; the
Gander Group, the Gander River Ultramafic Belt (the GRUB)
and the Davidsville Group. The easternmost Gander Group
consists of a thick, psammitic unit composed predominantly
of psammitic schist and a thinner, mixed unit of semipelitic
and pelitic schist with minor psammite. The mixed unit may
stratigraphically overlie the psammitic unit or be a lateral
facies equivalent of the latter. No fossils have been
recovered from the Gander Group. The GRUB is a terrain of
mafic and ultramafic plutonic rocks with minor pillow lava
and plagiogranite. It is interpreted to be a dismembered
ophiolite in thrust contact with the Gander Group. The
westernmost Davidsville Group consists of a basal conglomerate,
believed deposited unconformably upon the GRUB from
which it was derived, and an upper unit of greywacke and
slate, mostly of turbidite origin, with minor limestone and
calcareous sandstone. The limestone, which lies near the
base of the unit, contains Upper Llanvirn to Lower Llandeilo
fossils.
The Gander and Davidsville Groups display distinctly
different sedimentological , structural and metamorphic histories.
The Gander Group consists of quartz-rich, relatively
mature sediment. It has suffered three pre-Llanvirn deformations,
of which the main deformation, Dp produced a
major, NE-N-facing recumbent anticline in the southern
part of the study area. Middle greenschist conditions existed
from D^ to D- with growth of metamorphic minerals
during each dynamic and static phase. In contrast, the
mineralogically immature Davidsville Group sediment contains
abundant mafic and ultramafic detritus which is absent
from the Gander Group. The Davidsville Group displays the
effects of a single penetrative deformation with localized
D_ and D_ features, all of which can be shown to postdate
D_ in the Gander Group. Rotation of the flat Gander S- into
a subvertical orientation near the contact with the GRUB
and the Davidsville Group is believed to be a Davidsville
D^ feature. Regional metamorphism in the Davidsville Group
is lower greenschist with a single growth phase, MS .
These sedimentological, structural and metamorphic differences
between the Gander and Davidsville Groups persist
even where the GRUB is absent and the two units are in contact,
indicating that the tectonic histories of the Gander
and Davidsville Groups are distinctly different.
Structural features in the GRUB, locally the result of
multiple deformations, may be the result of Gander and/or
Davidsville deformations. Metamorphism is in the greenschist
facies. Geochemical analyses of the pillow lava suggest
that these rocks were formed in a back-arc basin. Mafic
intrusives in the Gander Group appear to be the result of
magraatism separate from that producing the pillow lava.
The Gander Group is interpreted to be a continental
rise prism deposited on the eastern margin of the Late
Precambrian-Lower Paleozoic lapetus Ocean. The GRUB,
oceanic crust possibly formed in a marginal basin to the
west, is believed to have been thrust eastward over the
Gander Group, deforming the latter, during the pre-Llanvirnian,
possibly Precambrian, Ganderian Orogeny. The
Middle Ordovician and younger Davidsville Group was derived
from, and deposited unconformably on, this deformed terrain.
Deformation of the Davidsville Group occurred during the
Middle Devonian Acadian Orogeny.