Boisvert Pluton
Stratigraphic label: [narc]boi
Map symbol: nAboi

First published: 7 December 2018
Last modified:

Translation of original French

Informal subdivision(s)
Numbering does not necessarily reflect the stratigraphic position.
 
None
 
Author: Daigneault and Allard, 1983
Age: Neoarchean
Reference section: Series of reference outcrops easily accessible along Road 167
Type area: South of Chibougamau, southeastern portion of NTS sheet 32G09
Geological province: Superior Province
Geological subdivision: Abitibi Subprovince
Lithology: Tonalite, granodiorite
Type: Lithodemic
Rank: Lithodeme
Status: Formal
Use: Active

Background

The intrusion was originally described as the “Rivière Boisvert Pluton” by Daigneault and Allard (1983, 1984) and Daigneault (1986). It is more simply described as “Boisvert Pluton” in more recent publications (Daigneault, 1991; Roy et al., 2005).

Description

According to Roy et al.,, (2005, p. 12), the Boisvert Pluton is “composed of leucotonalite (trondhjemite) and two mica granodiorite with a minor amount of tonalite or diorite richer in mafic minerals. It is white, locally pinkish or brownish, in altered patina and light grey in fresh exposure. It is medium grained and foliated, highlighted by the alignment of micas that tend to concentrate in clusters. It is intensely foliated to mylonitic at its western contact with mafic volcanics of the Obatogamau Formation. This contact also corresponds to the Lac Dufresne Deformation Zone interpreted as the western limit of the Grenville Front Tectonic Zone. At its southeastern edge, banding gradually increases towards tonalitic gneiss and contact is diffuse. Along NNE faults that cut the Boisvert Pluton, leucotonalite is heavily altered in epidote, hematite and chlorite and has undergone brittle to ductile deformation. The Boisvert Pluton is cut by numerous intrusions or veins, usually of pegmatitic granite. Granitic mobilisate derived from partial melting is locally present but of minor importance (<5%). Amphibolite enclaves are common in the pluton and can reach up to 5 km long by several hundred metres thick. They consist of fine to medium-grained banded garnet amphibolite. In leucotonalite and granodiorite thin sections, microcline is observed as small interstitial grains, which highlights the relatively potassic character of the Boisvert Pluton in comparison to other felsic intrusions in the region. Quartz often forms lenticular grain clusters. The most important mafic minerals are green biotite, epidote and muscovite. Hornblende and garnet are scarce. The most common accessory minerals are titanite, allanite, magnetite, rutile, apatite and zircon.”

Thickness and Distribution

The Boisvert Pluton is an ovoid intrusion whose long axis measures 32 km and oriented NNE-SSW, parallel to the Grenville Front Tectonic Zone. The WNW-ESE-oriented short axis is 18 km long.

Dating

A tonalite sample returned a crystallization age of 2697 ±3 Ma (Davis et al., 2005; TIMS U-Pb on zircons), placing the Boisvert Pluton in the category of syntectonic plutons of northeastern Abitibi (Goutier and Melançon, 2010).

Isotopic System Mineral Crystallization Age (Ma) (+) (-) Reference(s)
U-Pb Zircon 2739 10 10 Davis et al., 2005

Stratigraphic Relationship(s)

The Boisvert Pluton cuts mafic volcanic rocks of the Obatogamau Formation and their amphibolite facies equivalents characterizing the Grenville Front Tectonic Zone transition zone (Daigneault and Allard, 1994; Roy et al., 2005). At its eastern limit, it cuts quartzofeldspathic gneiss, hornblende-biotite gneiss and mafic gneiss. To the south, it cuts gneissic (locally migmatitic) tonalites intruded by pegmatites.

Paleontology

Does not apply.

References

15 octobre 2019