The NAKP kimberlite fields are aligned along a northeast–southwest trend for a distance of about 350 km (220 mi), roughly subparallel to structural discontinuities called the Great Slave Lake Shear Zone to the north and the Snowbird Tectonic Zone to the south. They lie above or marginal to a 2.0 to 2.4 billion year old Precambriancraton called the Buffalo Head Terrane, which has no surface exposure. Near the fields the Precambrian rocks are overlain by about 500 m (1,600 ft) to 2,200 m (7,200 ft) of Phanerozoicsedimentary rocks, and covered by unconsolidated glacial and post-glacial sediments.[1]
Lithology and mineralogy
The volcanic rocks of the BHH and BM fields are classified as kimberlites. The ML rocks are not considered to be archetypal kimberilte and have been variously classified as alkaline ultramafic rocks, hybrid alkaline ultramafic rocks, alkali olivine basalt and basanite; they are difficult to classify because of strong clay alteration that has obliterated most of their original mineralogy.[3]
All of the NAKP rocks are pyroclastic, and most represent maar-style diatremes that have a vertical-walled volcanic crater of explosive origin, surrounded by a low rim of ejecta. Pyroclastic fall and surge are the two volcanic mechanisms of deposition. There are also deposits formed by hydraulic reworking and resedimentation of material from tephra cones and/or extra-crater fall and surge deposits.[2][3]
^ abBoyer, L., McCandless, T., Tosdal, R. and Russell, K. 2008. Volcanic facies and eruption styles in the Cretaceous Buffalo Head Hills kimberlites, Alberta, Canada. 9th International Kimberlite Conference, Extended Abstract 9IKC-A-00367-2, 3 p.