Ademola Q Adetunji

and 6 more

A new 80-site magnetotelluric (MT) survey, integrated with reprocessed seismic reflection profiles, across the supergiant Timmins-Porcupine gold camp of the Abitibi greenstone belt (AGB) was conducted to investigate the architecture of crustal-scale structures. Resistivity sections derived from 3-D MT inversions reveal a major 40 km by 20 km sub-horizontal 500-1000 S conductor north of the Porcupine Destor fault zone at 5–10 km depth. A horizontal component of this conductor, attributed to a deeply buried >2687 Ma graphitic argillaceous unit at the base of Porcupine assemblage, strikes east-west parallel to the Pipestone fault zone. A second steeply-dipping component strikes northwest-southeast parallel to the Buskegau River fault. This conductor correlates spatially with lateral breaks in seismic reflectors and velocity models in the upper, middle, and lower crust, and provides evidence of a crustal-scale suture which also resulted in imbrication of <2698 Ma metasedimentary rocks onto the southern AGB. Enhanced conductivity and spatially complex electrical structure of the crust to the north of the Porcupine Destor fault zone reflects the asymmetric distribution of metasedimentary packages, second- and third-order bounding structures, and gold mineralization. The MT resistivity models also resolve an upper crustal conductor located 10 km south of the surface trace of the Porcupine Destor fault zone, providing support for a south-dipping crustal fault. Breaks in seismic reflectors underlying this conductor provide additional evidence of sub-vertical structures extending through the middle crust, postdating post-tectonic collapse or orogen-parallel ductile flow at ∼2660-2590 Ma, and consistent with late strike-slip deformation.

Lucie Mathieu

and 6 more

Mostafa Naghizadeh

and 10 more

Passive seismic methods are considered as cost-effective and environmental-friendly alternatives to active (reflection) seismic methods. We have acquired co-located active and passive seismic surveys over a metal-endowed Archean granite-greenstone terrane in the Larder Lake area to investigate the reliability of the estimated elastic properties using the passive seismic methods. The passive seismic data was processed using two different data processing approaches, the ambient noise surface wave tomography (ANSWT) and receiver function analysis methods to generate shear-wave velocity and P- to S-wave (P-S) convertibility profiles of the subsurface, respectively. The Cadillac-Larder Lake Fault (CLLF) was imaged as a south-dipping sub-vertical zone of weak reflectivity in the reflection seismic profile. To the north of the CLLF, a package of north-dipping reflections in the upper-crust (at depths of 5-10 km) resides on the boundary of high (on the top) and low (on the bottom) shear-wave velocity zones estimated using the ANSWT method. This package of reflections is most likely caused by overlaying mafic volcanic and underlying felsic intrusive rocks. The P-S convertibility profile imaged the Moho boundary at ~40 km depth as well as a south-dipping slab that penetrates into the mantel which was interpreted to be either caused by the delamination of the lower crust or a possible deeper extension of the Porcupine-Destor Fault. Overall, the reflectivity, shear-wave velocity, and P-S convertibility profiles exhibited a good correlation and provided a detailed image of the subsurface lithological structure to a depth of 10 km.

Lucie Mathieu

and 6 more

Copper-Au magmatic-hydrothermal systems dominate in the Chibougamau area of the Neoarchean Abitibi subprovince (greenstone belt) of the Superior Province (craton), whereas orogenic gold mineralization is more common in the rest of the Abitibi. Understanding differences in metal endowment within the Abitibi greenstone belt requires insights into the geodynamic evolution of the Chibougamau area. This was addressed by imaging the crust using seismic reflection profiling acquired as part of the Metal Earth project. Seismic reflection sections display shallowly south-dipping reflectors located within the upper-crust (e.g., deep continuation of the Barlow fault) and a northward-dipping mid-crust imbricated with older crust (Opatica subprovince) to the north. Multiple reflectors characterize the upper part of the mid-crust, interpreted as faults superimposed on a major lithological boundary. These structures likely formed during terrane accretion prior to craton stabilization. Combining the new seismic data with known stratigraphic, structural and magmatic records, we propose that the study area was initially a normal (i.e., thick) Archean oceanic crust that formed at or before 2.80 Ga and that evolved through terrane imbrication at 2.73-2.70 Ga. Shortening caused rapid burial, devolatilization and partial melting of hydrated mafic rocks to produce tonalite magmas that may have mixed with mantle-derived melts to produce the diorite-tonalite suite associated with observed Cu-Au magmatic-hydrothermal mineralization.