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Hydrochronology of a Proposed Deep Geological Repository for Low- and Intermediate-Level Nuclear Waste in Southern Ontario from U–Pb Dating of Secondary Minerals: Response to Silurian and Cretaceous Events

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Davis, D.W., C.N. Sutcliffe, A.M. Thibodeau, J. Spalding, D. Schneider, A. Cruden, J. Adams, A. Parmenter, M. Jensen, and Z. Zajacz. Hydrochronology of a Proposed Deep Geological Repository for Low- and Intermediate-Level Nuclear Waste in Southern Ontario from U–Pb Dating of Secondary Minerals: Response to Silurian and Cretaceous Events. Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences 57, no. 4 (2020): 464-476. https://doi.org/10.1139/cjes-2019-0004

For more information on the published version, visit Canadian Science Publishing's Website, doi:dx.doi.org/10.1139/cjes-2019-0004). This paper is one of two companion papers published in this issue of Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences. (Sutcliffe et al. 2020. Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences. This issue. doi:dx.doi.org/10.1139/cjes-2019-0005).

A record of fluid flow has been documented within a Paleozoic carbonate platform sequence by U–Pb dating of calcite in veins and vugs from rock core sampled through a shallowly dipping sequence of sedimentary rocks beneath the Bruce nuclear site, Ontario, Canada. Secondary calcite from >650 m deep Ordovician carbonate rocks yields a Silurian age of 434 ± 5 Ma possibly related to infiltration of seawater from overlying evaporitic basins as well as hydrothermal solutions that infiltrated from below. In contrast, near-surface Devonian rocks mostly give vein infill ages over the range of 80–100 Ma with evidence for younger infill down to 50 Ma. Vein calcite samples previously dated from surface outcrops of Ordovician carbonate exposed up to 500 km to the east yielded similar U–Pb ages. Coincidence of near-surface vein calcite ages indicates widespread vein emplacement synchronous with a change in direction of motion of the North American plate as well as possible erosional unroofing following passage of the region over the Great Meteor hotspot approximately 125 Myr ago. Deeper carbonate formations have remained apparently impermeable to post-Paleozoic disturbance despite these perturbations.


MLA citation style (9th ed.)

Parmenter, A, et al. Hydrochronology of a Proposed Deep Geological Repository for Low- and Intermediate-level Nuclear Waste In Southern Ontario From U–pb Dating of Secondary Minerals: Response to Silurian and Cretaceous Events. . 2020. dickinson.hykucommons.org/concern/generic_works/feda7c0c-00d9-4792-ac6b-ab7014501314?q=2019.

APA citation style (7th ed.)

P. A, C. A, A. J, Z. Z, T. A. M, D. D.w, S. J, J. M, S. D, & S. C.n. (2020). Hydrochronology of a Proposed Deep Geological Repository for Low- and Intermediate-Level Nuclear Waste in Southern Ontario from U–Pb Dating of Secondary Minerals: Response to Silurian and Cretaceous Events. https://dickinson.hykucommons.org/concern/generic_works/feda7c0c-00d9-4792-ac6b-ab7014501314?q=2019

Chicago citation style (CMOS 17, author-date)

Parmenter, A., Cruden, A., Adams, J., Zajacz, Z., Thibodeau, Alyson M., Davis, D.W., Spalding, J. et al. Hydrochronology of a Proposed Deep Geological Repository for Low and Intermediate-Level Nuclear Waste In Southern Ontario From U–pb Dating of Secondary Minerals: Response to Silurian and Cretaceous Events. 2020. https://dickinson.hykucommons.org/concern/generic_works/feda7c0c-00d9-4792-ac6b-ab7014501314?q=2019.

Note: These citations are programmatically generated and may be incomplete.

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