Sedimentary Cover of the Canadian Shield through Mesozoic Time Reflected by Nd Isotopic and Geochemical Results for the Sverdrup Basin, Arctic Canada
2004
Abstract The Sverdrup Basin of the Canadian Arctic Islands contains a sedimentary record, with only short breaks, from Early Carboniferous to Late Cretaceous time and can be used to document the nature of sediments delivered from northern Canada and Greenland. Sm‐Nd isotopic analysis of 72 sedimentary rock samples from the Sverdrup Basin, coupled with trace element characterization, shows that for most of Carboniferous to Late Cretaceous time, the sediment supply in the northern part of North America was dominated by a single broad provenance; 56 of the 72 samples lie squarely within the Nd isotopic evolution of a clastic sedimentary cover delivered to the region following 450–350 Ma Caledonian and Franklinian mountain building in Greenland and the Canadian Arctic Islands. Cratonic Shield sources in Greenland and Canada are hardly evident in the record, and significant contributions to the sediment budget from any source other than the post‐mid‐Paleozoic orogenic cover occurred only during four relatively...
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