Deformation of the “Anorogenic” Wolf River Batholith, Wisconsin, USA: Understanding the Baraboo Orogeny Hinterland
The Mesoproterozoic (~1470 Ma) Wolf River batholith (WRB) is exposed over 6500 km<sup>2</sup>, encompassing 11 plutons that crosscut the Archean Marshfield and Proterozoic Penokean terranes. As the WRB is the classically defined anorogenic batholith, to test this hypothesis, seven igneou...
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2025-04-01
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| author | John P. Craddock David H. Malone Erica P. Craddock Steven J. Baumann John E. Malone Ryan Porter |
| author_facet | John P. Craddock David H. Malone Erica P. Craddock Steven J. Baumann John E. Malone Ryan Porter |
| author_sort | John P. Craddock |
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| description | The Mesoproterozoic (~1470 Ma) Wolf River batholith (WRB) is exposed over 6500 km<sup>2</sup>, encompassing 11 plutons that crosscut the Archean Marshfield and Proterozoic Penokean terranes. As the WRB is the classically defined anorogenic batholith, to test this hypothesis, seven igneous phases were analyzed using anisotropy of magnetic susceptibility (AMS), as a proxy for magmatic flow during intrusion, and the samples recorded a sub-horizontal emplacement in six different orientations. Paleopoles from six of eight igneous samples preserve a wide variety of sub-vertical orientations with two reversed and four normal polarities. The synorogenic Baldwin Conglomerate is the youngest rock (<1460 Ga) associated with WRB. Magnetic fabrics are horizontal, but multidomain and paleopole signatures, where interpretable, are sub-vertical. The North American APWP places middle Laurentia at low-latitude during Geon 14, and all our paleopoles are sub-vertical, not sub-horizontal, again suggesting post-intrusion deformation. Moreover, the McCauley gneiss (1886 Ma; U-Pb zircon), Rib Mountain Quartzite (1750 Ma MDA; U-Pb zircon, <i>n</i> = 150), Dells of the Eau Claire rhyolite (1483 Ma; U-Pb zircon, 1469 Ma; monazites-in-garnet), and Baldwin conglomerate (1460 Ma MDA; U-Pb zircons, <i>n</i> = 150) are sub-vertical inliers (xenoliths) in the igneous suite; the Proterozoic Wausau turbidite (1850 Ma MDA; U-Pb zircon, <i>n</i> = 150) was intruded by the WRB and dips 25°W. Here, we present a reinterpretation of the WRB as a deformed synorogenic rather than an anorogenic intrusion. |
| format | Article |
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| institution | DOAJ |
| issn | 2076-3263 |
| language | English |
| publishDate | 2025-04-01 |
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| spelling | doaj-art-9d057b999cc44309a4bbbc75f81db6852025-08-20T03:13:54ZengMDPI AGGeosciences2076-32632025-04-0115415010.3390/geosciences15040150Deformation of the “Anorogenic” Wolf River Batholith, Wisconsin, USA: Understanding the Baraboo Orogeny HinterlandJohn P. Craddock0David H. Malone1Erica P. Craddock2Steven J. Baumann3John E. Malone4Ryan Porter5Macalester College, Minneapolis, MN 55105, USADepartment of Geography, Geology, and the Environment, Illinois State University, Normal, IL 61761, USAGeology Department, Lawrence University, Appleton, WI 54911, USAMidwest Institute of Geosciences and Engineering, Hobart, IN 46432, USAIowa State Geological Survey, Iowa City, IA 52242, USASchool of Earth and Environment, Northern Arizona University, Flagstaff, AZ 86011, USAThe Mesoproterozoic (~1470 Ma) Wolf River batholith (WRB) is exposed over 6500 km<sup>2</sup>, encompassing 11 plutons that crosscut the Archean Marshfield and Proterozoic Penokean terranes. As the WRB is the classically defined anorogenic batholith, to test this hypothesis, seven igneous phases were analyzed using anisotropy of magnetic susceptibility (AMS), as a proxy for magmatic flow during intrusion, and the samples recorded a sub-horizontal emplacement in six different orientations. Paleopoles from six of eight igneous samples preserve a wide variety of sub-vertical orientations with two reversed and four normal polarities. The synorogenic Baldwin Conglomerate is the youngest rock (<1460 Ga) associated with WRB. Magnetic fabrics are horizontal, but multidomain and paleopole signatures, where interpretable, are sub-vertical. The North American APWP places middle Laurentia at low-latitude during Geon 14, and all our paleopoles are sub-vertical, not sub-horizontal, again suggesting post-intrusion deformation. Moreover, the McCauley gneiss (1886 Ma; U-Pb zircon), Rib Mountain Quartzite (1750 Ma MDA; U-Pb zircon, <i>n</i> = 150), Dells of the Eau Claire rhyolite (1483 Ma; U-Pb zircon, 1469 Ma; monazites-in-garnet), and Baldwin conglomerate (1460 Ma MDA; U-Pb zircons, <i>n</i> = 150) are sub-vertical inliers (xenoliths) in the igneous suite; the Proterozoic Wausau turbidite (1850 Ma MDA; U-Pb zircon, <i>n</i> = 150) was intruded by the WRB and dips 25°W. Here, we present a reinterpretation of the WRB as a deformed synorogenic rather than an anorogenic intrusion.https://www.mdpi.com/2076-3263/15/4/150precambrianpaleomagnetismgeochronology |
| spellingShingle | John P. Craddock David H. Malone Erica P. Craddock Steven J. Baumann John E. Malone Ryan Porter Deformation of the “Anorogenic” Wolf River Batholith, Wisconsin, USA: Understanding the Baraboo Orogeny Hinterland Geosciences precambrian paleomagnetism geochronology |
| title | Deformation of the “Anorogenic” Wolf River Batholith, Wisconsin, USA: Understanding the Baraboo Orogeny Hinterland |
| title_full | Deformation of the “Anorogenic” Wolf River Batholith, Wisconsin, USA: Understanding the Baraboo Orogeny Hinterland |
| title_fullStr | Deformation of the “Anorogenic” Wolf River Batholith, Wisconsin, USA: Understanding the Baraboo Orogeny Hinterland |
| title_full_unstemmed | Deformation of the “Anorogenic” Wolf River Batholith, Wisconsin, USA: Understanding the Baraboo Orogeny Hinterland |
| title_short | Deformation of the “Anorogenic” Wolf River Batholith, Wisconsin, USA: Understanding the Baraboo Orogeny Hinterland |
| title_sort | deformation of the anorogenic wolf river batholith wisconsin usa understanding the baraboo orogeny hinterland |
| topic | precambrian paleomagnetism geochronology |
| url | https://www.mdpi.com/2076-3263/15/4/150 |
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