Geophysical mapping of the Great Lakes Tectonic Zone and surrounding Precambrian geology in the central Upper Peninsula, Michigan

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Abstract

The Great Lakes Tectonic Zone (GLTZ) forms the boundary between the Wawa-Abitibi subprovince (north side) and Minnesota River Valley subprovince (south side) within the Archean Superior Province. The GLTZ is concealed for all of its 1100 km length, except south of Marquette in the central Upper Peninsula of Michigan (Sims, 1991; Sims and Day, 1993). Near KI Sawyer, it is exposed as a NW-striking, 2.3 km wide mylonite zone along a strike length of about 11 km, with a mylonitic foliation that dips steeply to the SW (Sims, 1993). The location extent of the GLTZ is unknown to the east where it is concealed beneath Paleozoic sedimentary rocks. We use legacy aeromagnetic data (Daniels et al., 2009) in combination with modern aeromagnetic data (Drenth and Brown, 2020) and ground gravity data to geophysically characterize the GLTZ and map its eastward extent under cover and map additional nearby covered Precambrian tectonic elements.

Study Area

Publication type Conference Paper
Publication Subtype Conference Paper
Title Geophysical mapping of the Great Lakes Tectonic Zone and surrounding Precambrian geology in the central Upper Peninsula, Michigan
Year Published 2023
Language English
Publisher Institute on Lake Superior Geology
Contributing office(s) Eastern Mineral and Environmental Resources Science Center, Geology, Geophysics, and Geochemistry Science Center
Description 2 p.
Larger Work Type Book
Larger Work Subtype Conference publication
Larger Work Title Institute on Lake Superior Geology proceedings, 69th annual meeting, Eau Claire, Wisconsin, part 1 - Abstracts and proceedings
First page 27
Last page 28
Country United States
State Michigan
Other Geospatial Upper Peninsula
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