About This Item

Share This Item

The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database

CSPG Bulletin

Abstract


Bulletin of Canadian Petroleum Geology
Vol. 38A (1990), No. 1. (December), Pages 36-44

Upper Proterozoic to Middle Cambrian History of the Peace River Arch: Evidence from the Rocky Mountains

M.E. McMechan

ABSTRACT

The stratigraphic record exposed in the Rocky Mountains provides important information on the early uplift history of the Peace River Arch that is unavailable from the subsurface. Thickness and facies changes in Upper Proterozoic, Lower Cambrian and Middle Cambrian strata show that the arch was a positive tectonic feature from the latest Upper Proterozoic (sub-Gog Group) through Middle Cambrian. No evidence of a two-sided arch was found in the Upper Proterozoic Windermere Supergroup: the "Mt. Vreeland High" is not the Cordilleran expression of the Peace River Arch, but part of a more proximal facies of the Windermere Supergroup that extends from what subsequently became the south margin of the Arch to well north of the Arch area (58°N).

In the Rocky Mountains the south margin of the Arch follows important transverse, basement-involved structure(s) that formed during Late Proterozoic (Windermere) rifting. Similar structures may extend into the subsurface where they could have been reactivated during episodic tectonism associated with the uplift and subsidence of the Peace River Arch. During the Cambrian, the south margin of the Arch was a fundamental tectonic feature and the stratigraphic changes associated with this feature subsequently caused the formation of anomalous east-west trending faults and folds during the Cretaceous-Eocene deformation that formed the Rocky Mountains.

RESUME

Le registre stratigraphique expose dans les montagnes Rocheuses fournissent une importante information sur l'histoire du soulevement de l'arche de Peace River vers son commencement qui n'est pas disponible des donnees de subsurface. Les changements d'epaisseur et de facies dans les couches du Proterozoique inferieur et du Cambrien inferieur et moyen, demontrent que l'arche etait une particularite tectonique positive a partir de la fin du Proterozoique superieur (groupe sous-Gog) et a travers le Cambrien moyen. Aucune preuve d'une arche a deux cotes ne fut trouvee dans le supergroupe Windermere du Proterozoique superieur: la "crete Mt. Vreeland" n'est pas l'expression cordillerienne de l'arche de Peace River, mais fait partie d'un facies plus proximal du supergroupe Windermere qui s'etend de ce qui devint par la suite la limite sud de l'arche, jusqu'a bien au nord de la region de l'arche (58°N).

Dans les montagnes Rocheuses la limite sud de l'arche suit une importante ou d'importantes structures transversales impliquant le socle et qui se formerent durant la creation de rifts du Proterozoique superieur (Windemere). Des structures semblables pourraient se prolonger dans la subsurface ou elles pourraient avoir ete reactivees durant des episodes de tectonisme associes au soulevemant et a la subsidence de l'arche de Peace River. Durant le Cambrien, la marge sud de l'arche etait une particularite tectonique fondamentale et les changements stratigraphiques associes a cette particularite furent par la suite la cause de failles et de plis anormaux, orientes est-ouest, durant la deformation Cretace-Eocene qui produisit les montagnes Rocheuses.

Traduit par Marc Charest


Pay-Per-View Purchase Options

The article is available through a document delivery service. Explain these Purchase Options.

Watermarked PDF Document: $14
Open PDF Document: $24