Physics of the Earth and Planetary Interiors 158 (2006) 240–263
Mantle fabric at multiple scales across an Archean–Proterozoic
boundary, Grenville Front, Canada
A.W. Frederiksen
a, ∗
, I.J. Ferguson
a
, D. Eaton
b
, S.-K. Miong
a
, E. Gowan
a
a
Department of Geological Sciences, University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, Manitoba R3T 2N2, Canada
b
Department of Earth Sciences, University of Western Ontario, London, Ontario N6A 5B7, Canada
Received 28 July 2005; received in revised form 18 January 2006; accepted 15 March 2006
Abstract
In eastern Ontario and southwest Qu´ ebec, Canada, the Proterozoic Grenville province abuts against the Archean Superior province.
The complex tectonic history of the region is reflected in the pattern of electrical and seismic anisotropy within the lithosphere,
while asthenospheric anisotropy is expected to reflect current patterns of mantle flow. Magnetotelluric and teleseismic data from the
POLARIS and FedNor experiments and the Lithoprobe Abitibi–Grenville transect are examined for SKS splitting and geoelectric
strike, and receiver functions are generated at selected stations, in order to characterise both vertical and horizontal variations in
anisotropy in the eastern Ontario upper mantle. The average shear-wave split direction coincides with the direction of plate motion.
Split times are found to be strongest in the southern part of the Grenville province, where asthenospheric flow is enhanced by the
presence of a lithospheric divot. The Ottawa–Bonnechere graben and the immediate vicinity of the Grenville Front are regions
of altered split direction indicative of a lithospheric component of anisotropy. North of the Grenville Front, there is a gradual
reorientation of the split direction from ESE to ENE which is not easily attributable to crustal tectonics, and may represent the
northern limit of lithospheric deformation produced by the Grenville orogen. Electrical anisotropy is pervasive in the study area. The
pattern of magnetotelluric strikes is more complex than the SKS pattern, though after correction for local distortion, the geoelectric
strikes correlate fairly well with SKS measurements at nearby stations. Obliquity between SKS and magnetotelluric results shows
no consistent orientation across the study area. Receiver-function analysis at three selected stations is indicative of a subcrustal
anisotropic layer with a consistent SSE fast direction, underlain at station GAC by a sequence of anisotropic layers with varying
directions; this sequence is not observed at station SADO. Combining these results, we interpret the strength and direction of
anisotropic fabric in the Grenville to vary strongly with depth. The upper part of the lithosphere contains thin anisotropic layers
perhaps related to eclogitization and relict slabs, but which are insufficient to explain the observed SKS splits. The lower lithosphere
is likely to be more ductile and uniformly anisotropic, and may be an important control on magnetotelluric strike directions as well
as a significant contributor to SKS splitting. The largest contributor to SKS splitting in this region is interpreted to be asthenospheric
anisotropy related to absolute plate motion.
© 2006 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Keywords: Anisotropy; Superior; Grenville; Shear-wave splitting; Geoelectric strike; Receiver function
∗
Corresponding author. Fax: +1 204 474 7623
E-mail address: frederik@cc.umanitoba.ca (A.W. Frederiksen).
1. Introduction
In many areas of geophysics, it is a common first-
order assumption to treat Earth materials as isotropic,
i.e., as having directionally invariant properties. How-
ever, plate-tectonic processes deform rocks in ways that
0031-9201/$ – see front matter © 2006 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
doi:10.1016/j.pepi.2006.03.025