ABSTRACT
A thin (<200 m.) mafic suite and well developed mafic/ultramafic
transition zone are exposed above a flat lying peridotite contact on northwestern
Table Mountain. The igneous layering and sedimentary features indicate
mineral deposition under conditions which promoted adcumulate growth, were
capable of minor transport, and were subjected to at least minor tectonic
activity during consolidation. Feldspathic,. mafic, and ultramafic dikes
and veins cross-cut the layering. Microscopic futures indicate deformation
at elevated temperature and/or low strain rates. Deformation is best developed
within the transition zone, but cataclastic zones are most common in the
hornblende gabbros. Orientations of layering, foliation, and lineation
indicate a variable mafic/ultramafic transition and macroscopic folding.
Geometric analysis indicates three distinct fold axis orientations: an
east-west horizontal fold axis, a northeast trending modestly plunging
axis, and a vertical though poorly defined axis. Such features demonstrate
that an apparently simple contact relationship may be extremely complex.
This has important implications for ocean floor accretion. The relatively
simple ocean floor seismic stratigraphy masks very complex petrological
and structural processes. Such processes may involve deposition in an actively
convecting magma chamber with a differentially subsiding wedge (Dewey and
K dd, 1977), in which folding occurs in response to the steepening angle
between the cumulate banding and the base of the magma chamber. The instability
is enhanced by the different accumulation rates and densities of the minerals
involved. The lineation may originally be a sedimentary feature indicative
of transport direction from the convection cell, and perpendicular to the
compressive stress which produced. the folding. The different orientations
of lineations and fold axes could be produced by rotation of the ocean
crustal blocks during lateral transport along the ocean floor and/or obduction.
Further detailed study of ophiolite complexes will continue to shed light
upon the nature and development of oceanic crust.
O'Connell, S., 1979. Geology of the Mafic/Ultramafic Transition, Table
Mountain, Western Newfoundland. Unpublished MSc. thesis, State University
of New York at Albany. 145pp., +xiv.
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