2013 SCUGOG Lecture: "The Great Alaskan Terrane Wreck"
February 07, 2013
The Department of Earth Sciences, 澳门六合彩开奖预测 is pleased to announce the 13th Annual SCUGOG Lecture in Earth Sciences. Our invited speaker is , past President of the Geological Association of Canada, and Director of the School of Earth and Ocean Sciences at the University of Victoria. His lecture is entitled: "The Great Alaskan Terrane Wreck: A Plate Tectonic Odyssey & the Origin of the Cordilleran Mountain System of North America." The lecture will be held Thursday, March 7, 2013; 7:00 pm – 8:00 pm; on campus in the 3M Centre, Room 3250. Free parking is available in the Weldon lot.
Abstract: During the break-up of the supercontinent
Pangea, from 180 million years ago onwards, exotic 1000 km long crustal
blocks or “terranes” were added to the west coast of North America,
giving us much of the present-day British Columbia, Yukon and all of
Alaska. Where did these exotic crustal terranes originate, and how did
they get there? The crust underpinning the Cordilleran mountain system
of western North America was possibly assembled more than 15,000 km west
of North America as a train of crustal blocks, and its arrival as a
“terrane wreck” after a long plate tectonic odyssey gave rise to
mountainous British Columbia and was responsible for the geological
construction of Alaska. Such “terrane wrecks” may constitute an
important mechanism for the growth of continents throughout much of
Earth history.
The lecture is free and open to all members of the community! All are also invited for a Grad Club reception to follow.
The SCUGOG Lecture was established through the generosity of an anonymous donor; it seeks to highlight geological work of broad public interest by Canadian Earth Scientists.