Book Chapter10.1016/B0-12-369396-9/00401-9
NORTH AMERICA | Northern Cordillera
J.W.H. Monger
- 01 Jan 2005
pp 36-47
1
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Citations
Zinc on the edge—isotopic and geophysical evidence that cratonic edges control world-class shale-hosted zinc-lead deposits
David L. Huston,David C. Champion,Karol Czarnota,Jingming Duan,Matthew Hutchens,Suzanne Paradis,Mark Hoggard,Bryant Ware,George M. Gibson,Michael P. Doublier,Karen D. Kelley,Anne E. McCafferty,N. Hayward,Fred Richards,Svetlana G. Tessalina,Graham R. Carr +15 more
TL;DR: In this article , the authors present results from two zinc belts that highlight previously unused datasets for area selection and targeting, and provide new exploration criteria that can be used to identify prospective mineralized basins and define the most favorable parts of these basins.
References
Detrital zircon geochronology of Neoproterozoic to Permian miogeoclinal strata in British Columbia and Alberta
George E. Gehrels,Gerald M. Ross +1 more
TL;DR: In this article, the ages of detrital zircon grains from Neoproterozoic through Permian miogeoclinal strata in British Columbia and Alberta were determined.
92
The Canadian Cordillera as a modern analogue of Proterozoic crustal growth
Scott D. Samson,P. J. Patchett +1 more
TL;DR: The Canadian Cordillera represents a minimum of 20% (maximum 25%) of the global Phanerozoic crustal growth rate as discussed by the authors, but represents less crust production than the 1.9-1.7 Ga events of North America•Greenland•Europe.
75
Nd–Sr isotopic constraints on the interactions of the Intermontane Superterrane with the western edge of North America in the southern Canadian Cordillera
TL;DR: Sr and Nd isotopic compositions of the late Paleozoic metavolcanics and Late Triassic to early Tertiary granitoids from four magmatic episodes in the southern Canadian Cordillera from the Kootenay...
67
Lower Jurassic Amaltheidae (Ammonitina) in North America: paleobiogeography and tectonic implications
TL;DR: The amaltheids are restricted temporally to the late Pliensbachian and geographically to the northern part of the northern hemisphere as discussed by the authors, and the only species known in North America is Amaltheus stokesi.
41
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