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ADV - MSP - How the Midcontinent Rift nearly split ancient North America, Minneapolis

MSP - How the Midcontinent Rift nearly split ancient North America, Minneapolis website

University of Minnesota, Keller Hall, Room 3-210
Minneapolis, MN 55455

How the Midcontinent Rift nearly split ancient North America apart 1.1 billion years ago—and why it stopped

Presenter: Nick Swanson-Hysell, Ph.D., Associate Professor, Earth & Environmental Sciences, University of Minnesota

Geological Society of Minnesota seminars with slide show presentations are free and open to the public.

The cessation of rifting within the 1.1 billion-year-old Midcontinent Rift was a key event in the evolution of Minnesota and the Lake Superior region—if rifting had continued and led to the formation of an ocean basin, the subsequent geologic and paleogeographic history of our region would have been profoundly different. We have been able to use new age constraints to test the hypothesis that the rift ended due to the continent-continent collision of the Grenvillian orogeny. The transition from active extension to post-rift subsidence is recorded by the Brownstone Falls angular unconformity in northern Wisconsin, with thickness variations in the Copper Harbor Conglomerate implying topographic relief comparable to the modern East African rift. The end of active extension (ca. 1090–1085 Ma) coincides with the onset of Grenvillian metamorphism, consistent with continent-continent collision causing rifting to cease. Post-rift sedimentation of the Oronto Group continued until ca. 1045 Ma, and paleomagnetic data from these rocks reveal that Laurentia’s plate motion dramatically slowed as collision progressed and changed the force balance on the plate. Sedimentation ended when contractional deformation from the Grenvillian orogeny propagated into the continental interior in two phases: major uplift during the Ottawan phase and a secondary ca. 1000–980 Ma phase associated with the Rigolet stage. This final phase of contraction is associated with ca. 990 Ma deposition of the Jacobsville-Bayfield Group. Following 130 Myr of tectonic excitement from ca. 1110 to 980 Ma, stability returned to the midcontinent region. While the comings and goings of inland seas and the occasional impact crater have left their mark on the geological record, there has been only very minor tectonism over the past billion years.

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