Michael D. Higgins and Otto van Breemen,
Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences (1991), 29, 1412-1423.
U-Pb analyses of zircon and baddeleyite from the south-central and southeastern parts of the Lac-St-Jean Anorthosite Complex (LSJA) give an igneous crystallization age of 1157±3 Ma. Parts of the anorthosite were deformed in the solid-state and subsequently intruded by a diorite megadyke, that also gives a crystallization age of 1157±3 Ma, indicating that crystallization and deformation of the anorthosite were essentially synchronous. The diorite megadyke was intruded into a north-northeast- trending shear zone and deformed by sinistral strike-slip movements. Emplacement was followed by intrusion of a sub-parallel leucotroctolite megadyke that again gives the same crystallization age, and hence dates movement of the shear zone at 1157±3 Ma. This short history of crystallization and synchronous deformation rules out slow diapiric rise as the emplacement mechanism for the anorthosite. Instead anorthosite parental magmas probably rose up offsets in sub-vertical strike-slip shear zones to their present level.
In the southwestern part of the LSJA an age of 1142±3 Ma is interpreted to represent igneous crystallization. Contemporary thermal metamorphic effects recorded in the southeastern sector by growth of new zircon in granophyric segregations and zircon coronas on baddeleyite suggest this event was more widespread at slightly deeper levels. Evidence has not been found for a separate Grenville regional metamorphism.
The emplacement into the LSJA at 1076±3 Ma of two small leucogabbro intrusions was part of a widespread magmatic event similar to the main event at 1157-1142 Ma.