ABSTRACT
Table Mountain is the northernmost massif in the Bay of Islands Ophiolite.
It represents a continuous, approximately 7 kilometer thick, section of
residual harzburgite tectonites capped by a nearly flat-lying assemblage
of deformed and undeformed cumulate rocks. The notable mesoscopic structural
features of the massif include a zone of penetrative deformation extending
upsection from the tectonized harzburgites approximately 500 meters into
the dunites and basal cumulates. The orientation of the foliation and associated
lineations as well as the inferred shear sense within the zone is consistent
with that affecting the harzburgites. Highly deformed dunite lenses which
range in thickness up to 300 meters and up to 5 kilometers in lateral extent
lie beneath the plagioclase-bearing cumulates. They have a gradational
contact with the harzburgites. Throughout the harzburgite section compositional
layering, defined by variations in enstatite concentration, is parallel
or nearly parallel to the S1 foliation., The layering may either have limited
lateral extent (associated with transposed intrusives) or it occurs in
clusters of layers traceable as a group for several kilometers. The inclination
of both the foliation and the layering relative to the essentially flat-lying
contact between the cumulate and residual suites becomes progressively
more shallow at deeper levels within the harzburgite. Petrographic examination
of the massif indicates the presence of clinopyroxene and altered plagioclase
(now hydrogarnet and sericite) in the upper 50 to 200 meters of harzburgite
adjacent to the dunite lenses. Trace amounts of subhedral clinopyroxene
occur throughout the harzburgite, typically associated with polycrystalline
enstatite clots. Petrofabric analyses of olivine fabrics of samples from
the harzburgite section indicate that the [100] maxima strengthen with
increasing depth from the cumulate carapace. Fabric asymmetries relative
to the trace of the foliation and spinel lineation indicate a dominantly
sinistral shear sense. This concurs with the consistently oriented fold
vergence data. A model of a spreading ridge system, modified after Dewey
and Kidd (1977) and Casey (1980), is adapted to explain the "herringbone"
relationship between the compositional layering of the undeformed cumulates
and that of the S1 foliation. This foliation is here proposed to dip away
from the parental ridge axis.
Blake, R.W., 1982. The Structural Geology of the Tectonized Ultramafic
Suite of the Table Mountain Massif, Bay of Islands Complex, Newfoundland.
Unpublished MSc. thesis, State University of New York at Albany. 188 pp.,
+xii; 2 folded plates (maps)
University at Albany Science Library call number: SCIENCE Oversize
(*) QE 40 Z899 1982 B54
Return to MS Theses completed in the Geological Sciences Program, University at Albany