Date of Award

1977

Document Type

Dissertation

Degree Name

Doctor of Psychology (PsyD)

Department

Geology

First Advisor

J.F. Dewey

Second Advisor

W.S.F. Kidd

Abstract

The Lewis Hills is the southernmost of the four Bay of Islands Ophiolite Complex massifs. These massifs are considered to be the dissected remnants of a once nearly continuous thrust slice of oceanic crust and upper mantle of Early Ordovician age. The Lewis Hills Massif may be divided into three north south trending zones. The eastern zone (Bay of Islands Complex) is composed of variably deformed and recrystallized gabbro, troctolite, wehrlite and dunite cumulates and harzburgite tectonites. The western zone (Little Port Assemblage) consists of greenschist facies metagabbros, diabase dikes and minor quartz-diorite bodies. The central zone (Mount Barren Assemblage) is a 3 kilometer wide zone of highly deformed metagabbros and amphibolites cut by syn- and post- kinematic mafic and ultramafic intrusive bodies. The central zone grades into the western zone but has a sharp igneous contact against the eastern zone, it is proposed that the central zone rocks represent the deep crustal levels of an oceanic fracture zone preserved between two less deformed assemblages of oceanic crust and upper mantle. Along strike to the northeast, rocks similar to those of the eastern and western zones of the Lewis Hills are exposed in the Bay of Islands Ophiolite Complex and the Coastal Complex respectively. The Mount Barren Assemblage has not been previously described as part of the Coastal Complex and provides an important link between the Bay of Islands and Coastal Complexes. Detailed studies in the Lewis Hills permit fairly well constrained models to be constructed for the kinematics and timing of processes during the evolution of oceanic fracture zones and the obduction of the Bay of Islands Complex.

Comments

Karson, J.A., 1977. Geology of the northern Lewis Hills, western Newfoundland.
Unpublished PhD dissertation, State University of New York at Albany. 474pp., +xxii; 5 folded plates (maps)
University at Albany Science Library call number: SCIENCE MIC Film QE 199 K37X

karsonphdpl1a.pdf (26845 kB)
Plate 1a - Geology of the northern Lewis Hills, western Newfoundland (coloured geological outcrop map, scale ~1:14,800)

karsonphdpl1b.pdf (14935 kB)
Plate 1b - Geology of the southern Lewis Hills, western Newfoundland (coloured geological outcrop map, scale ~1:15,840)

karsonphdpl1x.pdf (4544 kB)
Plate 1x - map legend from plate 1a

karsonphdpl2.pdf (23345 kB)
Plate 2 - Structural map of shear zones in the northern Lewis Hills, western Newfoundland (part coloured geological map, scale ~1:14,800)

karsonphdpl3.pdf (6048 kB)
Plate 3 - Structural map of lineations and fold axes in the northern Lewis Hills, western Newfoundland (uncoloured geological map, scale ~1:14,800)

karsonphdpl4.pdf (14083 kB)
Plate 4 - Structural cross sections of the northern Lewis Hills, western Newfoundland (coloured geological sections, scale ~1:14,800)

karsonphdpl5.pdf (5878 kB)
Plate 5 - Compressional velocities of mafic and ultramafic rocks in the northern Lewis Hills, western Newfoundland (uncoloured geological map with overlay diagrams, scale ~1:14,800)

karsonphdt14.pdf (2935 kB)
Table 14 - Relative chronology of geological events in the northern Lewis Hills

karsonphdf62.pdf (575 kB)
Fig 6.2 - Geological overview map of the northwestern Lewis Hills

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