Abstract
New geologic maps show that the Champlain Thrust System traces continuously
between Shoreham and Benson, Vermont. The Champlain Thrust System consists
of at least three internally imbricated thrust slices in continental shelf
facies quartzites and carbonates. From north to south there is a structurally
controlled thinning of the Champlain Thrust System, and a climbing in stratigraphic
level by the thrusts. Within the Champlain Thrust System are a set of across-strike
structures which create offsets in the thrusts and the surrounding lithic
map unit boundaries. These structures function as lateral ramps in the
thrust system geometry and bound thrust duplexes. Often there are changes
in the stratigraphic level across these offsets which cannot be explained
by the thrust geometry. These are interpreted to be to be pre-thrust normal
faults, and a subsidiary (trench normal) set to the normal faults predicted
by the model of Bradley and Kidd (1991), wherein normal faulting occurs
in the continental crust in response to lithospheric flexure with the onset
of collision. Trench parallel normal faults bounded grabens containing
shales, and horsts of carbonate rocks. These horsts and grabens are now
reflected in the thrust system's geometry. The Mettawee River Fault, an
east-side-down normal fault, juxtaposes an intermixed belt of Middle Ordovician
shelf facies shale and Pre-Cambrian continental rise facies slates and
arenites, and Middle Ordovician flysch and melange, against the Champlain
Thrust System. This structure could be late Taconic (orogenic) to post-Taconic
in age, and have amounts of throw of tens to hundreds of meters. East of
the Mettawee River Fault is the westernmost Taconic allochthon, the Sunset
Lake Slice. This is a roughly north-south trending belt of green slates
interspersed with lenses of continental rise facies quartzites. The Sunset
Lake Slice is bound to the east by the Taconic Frontal Thrust, a late,
out of sequence thrust which transports an eastern belt of intermixed Ordovician
and Taconic shales and melange, as well as an eastern thrust belt of shelf
facies carbonates and shales. This belt of carbonates and shales is litholologically
identical to the rocks found in the Champlain Thrust System but structurally
dissimilar. The separation of these rocks from their facies equivalents
in the Champlain Thrust System is suggested to be due to their topographically
higher position on the paleo-continental shelf, the topography being largely
(pre-thrust) normal fault controlled.
"Cross-micas" are observed mica grains from the slates at the Cedar
Point Quarry, W. Castleton, Vt.. The Cedar Point cross-micas cross-cut
the boundaries of a late crenulation cleavage which has the morphology
of micro-kinks at the microscopic scale. This cross-cutting relationship
suggests that these grains grew later than the deformation which produced
the micro-kinks, and therefore later than the deformation which produced
the slaty cleavage. If this is the case, then perhaps many, or all of the
mica grains in the slate grew at this later time. The investigation to
gain insight into the timing of the development of the cross-micas included
producing a structural map and cross-section of the Cedar Point Quarry
which may be useful for related future studies. Field based observations
provide insight into the deformation history recorded at Cedar Point. The
cross-micas, and the surrounding micro-structure of the slate are documented
with photomicrographs. The observation that some micro-kinks are enriched
with opaque minerals (oxides and sulfides), whereas other, adjacent, micro-kinks
are enriched with phyllosilicates, is evidence that there was some amount
of mass transfer, presumably due to solution processes, after the formation
of the micro-kinks. Electron microprobe data was attained from the slates
in the hopes of confirming whether the cross-micas represent mica growth
which was localized along the micro-kinks (and thus in the absence of a
widespread metamorphic/mica growth event), or mica growth which was widespread
throughout the slates. It was found that there are two groups of muscovite
in the slate, a high K and a low K muscovite. There is also a group of
interlayered muscovite and chlorite. There is no obvious relationship between
structural setting, such as cross-micas, and the mineralogical variation,
though with future work, such a relationship may be established.
Hayman, N.W., 1997. Pre-thrust normal faults and post-tectonic micas
in the Taconic Range of west-central Vermont. Unpublished MSc. thesis,
State University of New York at Albany. 179 pp., +xiii; 3 folded plates
(maps)
University at Albany Science Library call number: SCIENCE Oversize
(*) QE 40 Z899 1997 H396
Return to MS Theses completed in the Geological
Sciences Program, University at Albany