Vote for your favorite mineral in #MinCup25! - Kosmochlor vs. Azurite
It's a battle of green vs blue as rare but vibrant chromium-bearing kosmochlor up against the deep blue copper alteration mineral azurite.
Log InRegister
Quick Links : The Mindat ManualThe Rock H. Currier Digital LibraryMindat Newsletter [Free Download]
Home PageAbout MindatThe Mindat ManualHistory of MindatCopyright StatusWho We AreContact UsAdvertise on Mindat
Donate to MindatCorporate SponsorshipSponsor a PageSponsored PagesMindat AdvertisersAdvertise on Mindat
Learning CenterWhat is a mineral?The most common minerals on earthInformation for EducatorsMindat ArticlesThe ElementsThe Rock H. Currier Digital LibraryGeologic Time
Minerals by PropertiesMinerals by ChemistryAdvanced Locality SearchRandom MineralRandom LocalitySearch by minIDLocalities Near MeSearch ArticlesSearch GlossaryMore Search Options
Search For:
Mineral Name:
Locality Name:
Keyword(s):
 
The Mindat ManualAdd a New PhotoRate PhotosLocality Edit ReportCoordinate Completion ReportAdd Glossary Item
Mining CompaniesStatisticsUsersMineral MuseumsClubs & OrganizationsMineral Shows & EventsThe Mindat DirectoryDevice SettingsThe Mineral Quiz
Photo SearchPhoto GalleriesSearch by ColorNew Photos TodayNew Photos YesterdayMembers' Photo GalleriesPast Photo of the Day GalleryPhotography

Monger, James W. H. (1993) Canadian Cordilleran tectonics: from geosynclines to crustal collage. Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences, 30 (2) 209-231 doi:10.1139/e93-019

Advanced
   -   Only viewable:
Reference TypeJournal (article/letter/editorial)
TitleCanadian Cordilleran tectonics: from geosynclines to crustal collage
JournalCanadian Journal of Earth Sciences
AuthorsMonger, James W. H.Author
Year1993 (February 1)Volume30
Issue2
PublisherCanadian Science Publishing
DOIdoi:10.1139/e93-019Search in ResearchGate
Generate Citation Formats
Mindat Ref. ID482032Long-form Identifiermindat:1:5:482032:5
GUID0
Full ReferenceMonger, James W. H. (1993) Canadian Cordilleran tectonics: from geosynclines to crustal collage. Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences, 30 (2) 209-231 doi:10.1139/e93-019
Plain TextMonger, James W. H. (1993) Canadian Cordilleran tectonics: from geosynclines to crustal collage. Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences, 30 (2) 209-231 doi:10.1139/e93-019
In(1993, February) Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences Vol. 30 (2) Canadian Science Publishing
Abstract/Notes The major contributions by the Geological Survey of Canada in the Canadian Cordillera—systematic mapping and definition of the regional geological framework—led directly to tectonic syntheses that attempted to explain its origin. From the late 1800's until the 1960's, Cordilleran mountain building was viewed as the end result of geosynclinal deposition. Early workers felt that a connection existed between mountain building and the Pacific basin, but its nature was never clear because little was known about ocean basins and their relationships to continental margins. In the 1950's, the nature of the oceanic lithosphere and ocean–continent relationships became better known; the knowledge led to formulation of the plate-tectonic hypothesis in the 1960's, a time fortuitously coinciding with completion, by the Survey, of most of the regional geological mapping (scale 1: 250 000). Geosynclinal rock units were reinterpreted in terms of their possible modern analogues (oceanic, island-arc, continental shelf – slope assemblages) and paleontological and paleomagnetic studies were used to support a mobilistic view of Cordilleran paleogeography, rather than the relatively fixed paleogeography tacitly assumed in earlier interpretations. In contrast with deterministic geosynclinal theory, it was recognized that plate-tectonic processes applied over a long time have enormous potential to create disorder; the result is an orogenic collage to be analyzed as a series of time – space events each of whose geodynamic settings may have been very different from one another. This aspect is especially important in the long-lived Cordillera, which was initiated as a continent–ocean boundary in latest Proterozoic time, evolved through the entire Phanerozoic, and today is a convergent-transform continen – ocean plate margin. Interactions between various oceanic plates and the North American plate, shown by the Cordilleran record of accretionary complexes, as well as results of possible arc–continent collisions and continental margin arc magmatism, formed new continental crust.


See Also

These are possibly similar items as determined by title/reference text matching only.

 
and/or  
Mindat.org is an outreach project of the Hudson Institute of Mineralogy, a 501(c)(3) not-for-profit organization.
Copyright © mindat.org and the Hudson Institute of Mineralogy 1993-2025, except where stated. Most political location boundaries are © OpenStreetMap contributors. Mindat.org relies on the contributions of thousands of members and supporters. Founded in 2000 by Jolyon Ralph.
To cite: Ralph, J., Von Bargen, D., Martynov, P., Zhang, J., Que, X., Prabhu, A., Morrison, S. M., Li, W., Chen, W., & Ma, X. (2025). Mindat.org: The open access mineralogy database to accelerate data-intensive geoscience research. American Mineralogist, 110(6), 833–844. doi:10.2138/am-2024-9486.
Privacy Policy - Terms & Conditions - Contact Us / DMCA issues - Report a bug/vulnerability Current server date and time: September 9, 2025 09:14:38
Go to top of page