Abstract
The Lewisporte/Loon Bay area is located within the Central Volcanic
belt of Newfoundland. It contains rocks of (?)upper Cambrian to Ordovician
in age. The most important group of rocks within this area is the three
part Campbellton sequence. The oldest unit of the Campbellton sequence
is the Loon Harbour Formation (500-1,000 m thick) composed of mafic volcaniclastics
that is conformably overlain by manganiferous cherts of the Luscombe Formation.
The Luscombe Formation (370 m thick) is composed of manganiferous cherts
that grade upward into highly argillaceous chert. Conformably overlying
the Luscombe Formation is the Riding Island greywacke that represents the
uppermost unit of the Campbellton sequence. Other units found within the
map area include the New Bay Formation, Dunnage melange, Burnt Bay chert
- (new), Caradocian age black slate, Goldson Formation and the Botwood
Group. The Campbellton sequence is interpreted to underlie the Dunnage
melange with the Riding Island greywacke representing a member of the New
Bay Formation. The Burnt Bay chert (new) is inferred to directly underlie
the Caradocian age black slate and overlie both the New Bay Formation and
Dunnage melange. Greywackes correlative with the Sansom/Point Leamington
greywackes are not found within the map area.
The dominant structure of the Lewisporte/Loon Bay area consists of
a series; of moderate to steeply southeast -plunging inclined to reclined,
close to tight, overturned macroscopic folds. Axial surface cleavage of
these folds forms a regional penetrative cleavage that affects all rocks
within the map area. These folds are interpreted to represent the first
major phase of deformation that affected this area (Dl). Various local
complications exist such as minor differences in style and orientations
of the folds and associated lineations and cleavage. Some of the minor
changes in fold orientations may be a result of a series of north-northeast
trending sinistral faults that kink and offset cleavage. Important non-penetrative
soft sediment structures pre-dating the major regional folding episode
are found in several units.
The Carmanville melange may represent the accretionary prism of a west
dipping subduction zone of the central volcanic belt of Newfoundland during
the late Cambrian to medial Ordovician. Deposition of the Luscombe Formation
most likely occurred in the forearc basin of this arc system during its
incipient development as nearby arc-related subsea volcanism pumped large
quantities of Mn, Fe and Si into the sea water to be precipitated as manganiferous
chert. Development of this arc system through time lead to the deposition
of the New Bay Formation and Lawrence Head volcanics adjacent to the forearc
trough resulting in gravitational slope instabilities and the olistotromic
deposition of the Dunnage melange in this forearc trough.
Livaccari, R.F., 1980. Geology of the Lewisporte/Loon Bay Area, Newfoundland,
Canada. Unpublished MSc. thesis, State University of New York at Albany.
135pp., +xi; 4 folded plates (maps).
University at Albany Science Library call number: SCIENCE Oversize
(*) QE 199 L37X
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