Already November is upon us, and several hot news items need to be announced following the recent CTG meeting in Rawdon. This is also the last Main Thrust to be published by the current executive, and, as promised in the previous one, we can now announce the composition of the new executive. So let's roll the presses.
THE NEW EXECUTIVE
At the CTG meeting in Rawdon, Quebec, the outgoing executive was pleased to announce that Alexander R. (Sandy) Cruden of Erindale Campus, University of Toronto, Paula MacKinnon of Brock University, and Frank =46ueten of Brock University, will be assuming the responsibilities of the executive for the next three years. Their addresses, emails, etc. can be found at the end of this Main Thrust. Sandy, Paula, and Frank have been very active members of the division, and have contributed to the success of both the SGTD and the CTG through organization of meetings and field trips, wiring together the internet email list and WWW site, acting as councilors, and general supportiveness.
Simon, Cees and I wish to thank Sandy, Paula and Frank for taking on this new chore, and we wish them the best of luck and lots of stamina for the next three years.
CTG MEETING '95
The annual CTG meeting was held this year in Rawdon, Quebec, some 70 km to the north of Montreal, from October 13 to 15. The meeting was organized by Jacques Martignole, University of Montreal, Shaocheng Ji, University of Montreal, and Andrew Hynes, McGill University. There was a very healthy turnout for the meeting, with approximately 45 participants, including a large proportion of students.
Saturday was devoted to a very full slate of oral presentations and posters, and the full program is included at the end of this newsletter.
The weather was also well organized, as it rained cats and dogs on Saturday while we sat inside, but cleared up on Sunday when Jacques and Shaocheng led a field trip to examine a thick series of high-temperature mylonites near the margin of the Morin anorthosite complex.
Thanks to Jacques, Shaocheng and Andrew for organizing an excellent meeting and a very interesting field trip.
BEST PAPER FOR 1994-1995
The SGTD's Best Paper award is given for the best paper of the year by Canadian authors, or dealing with Canadian structural geology and tectonics. The winning paper is chosen by the Division Executive from short lists of papers submitted by the Division Councilors.
The councilors select eligible papers from eight journals: CJES, Tectonophysics, Tectonics, GSA Bulletin, Geology, CSPG Bulletin, JGR, and the Journal of Structural Geology.
The winning paper was announced at the CTG meeting. The award went to Dazhi Jiang and Joseph Clancy White, both of the University of New Brunswick, for their paper Kinematics of rock flow and the interpretation of geological structures, with particular reference to shear zones, which appeared in the Journal of Structural Geology. Congratulations!
A full list of all the papers compiled by the councilors appears further on. Many thanks to the councilors, Philippe Erdmer, Larry Lane, Willem Langenberg, Bill Fyson, Joe White, Frank Fueten, and Simon Hanmer for their continuing efforts.
BEST THESIS 1995
The SGTD also sponsors a Best Thesis prize. The executive relies on supervisors for submittal of theses which have been definitively accepted since the previous autumn. The deadline for submissions was October 6. As it turned out, several theses were submitted at the very last minute, which made it difficult to make a selection before the CTG meeting. Also, as one of the submitted theses was supervised by a member of the executive, we felt it would be unfair for the present executive to make the selection. The new executive has accepted to review the submitted theses, and an announcement will be made in the coming weeks.
GAC-MAC SPECIAL SESSIONS AND SYMPOSIA
The SGTD will sponsor a Special Session at Winnipeg '96 (27-29 May). The session is being organized by Colleen Elliott and Stephen Kumarapelli, both of Concordia University, and will be entitled "Reactivated Basement Structures: Recognition, Dating, Significance". If you are interested in participating, get in touch with Colleen and Stephen as soon as possible at: colleen@vax2.concordia.ca. The deadline for submision of abstracts is the usual GAC deadline, that is December 1.
Sandy Cruden, Ed Sawyer and Keith Benn will be organizing a symposium for Ottawa '97, entitled "Extraction, Transport and Emplacement of Granitic Magmas: Structural, Tectonic, and Geophysical Aspects". This will mark the 50th anniversary of an ealier symposium on "The Origin of Granite", which was held at the 1947 GSA meeting, in Ottawa, and during which papers were presented by such notables as H.H. Read and N.L. Bowen. Sponsorship of the symposium by the SGTD was accepted at the CTG meeting in Rawdon.
EMAIL, THE MAIN THRUST, AND THE WEB
On behalf of the incoming exectutive, the outgoing one wishes to very strongly urge all SGTD and CTG members, and all others who receive the Main Thrust and who wish to continue doing so, to join the CTG email list set up by Frank Fueten at Brock University. There are several reasons why we are urging you so strongly.
1) By joining the CTG email crowd, you will receive the Main Thrust very promptly. Once the newsletter is prepared on a word processor, it can be quickly sent by email to everyone who is included on the list, whereas hardcopy must be photocopied and stuffed into envelopes, which must then be addressed and mailed. Furthermore, any other messages sent to the email hub at CTG@spartan.ac.brocku.ca are automatically redistributed to all those who are on the email list. This provides a rapid, and also very cheap way of communicating with the structure and tectonics community, and it has already been used by several of us to advertise for students, post-docs etc. Furthermore, reminders of deadlines for submissions for Best Paper, Best Thesis, and Best Student Abstract competitions, and announcements of CTG meetings, are regularly sent out only by email, not as hardcopy. 2) Times are tough. Budgets are shrinking. Staff are being laid off. This all means that it is no longer possible to rely on help from departmental secretaries with photocopying, envelope stuffing, and address label sticking. As I write these lines, I am reflecting upon the several hours that will be spent on these chores in order to send out hardcopy of this newsletter.
Please, if you have an email address, or if you do not have one but you can get access to this service, do it and send your address to Frank =46ueten (unless you already have done so). Our goal is to have every member of the SGTD, and everyone who wishes to be informed about SGTD and CTG matters, included in the email list.
If it is impossible for you to access email, then please fill out the address form included below and mail it or fax it to Frank. As of the next issue of the Main Thrust, hardcopy will only be sent out to those who have returned this form to the new executive.
As many of you may already be aware, Frank Fueten has also made another important contribution to the structure and tectonics community by setting up a World Wide Web home page for the CTG. At present, it provides access to, among other things, back issues of the Main Thrust. If you have your own home page, you can send the URL to Frank by email and he will place a hotlink in the CTG page. Find the CTG page on the web at http://craton.geol.brocku.ca/ctg.html
Well, that's it for now. Thanks for putting up with us over the last three years. Three cheers for the new executive. Merry Christmas and happy holiday season to all.
The former SGTD Executive
Simon Hanmer, Chairman Geological Survey of Canada 601 Booth Street, Ottawa K1A 0E8 fax: 613-234-8951 email: shanmer@cc2smtp.emr.ca Also on CompuServe: 76557,430CTG PROGRAM FOR 14 OCTOBER, 1995Cees van Staal, Treasurer Geological Survey of Canada 601 Booth Street, Ottawa K1A 0E8 fax: 613-995-7997 email: vanstaal@cc2smtp.emr.ca
Keith Benn, Secretary Department of Geology University of Ottawa 140 Louis Pasteur Ottawa K1N 6N5 fax: 613-562-5192 email: kbenn@aix1.uottawa.ca
The new SGTD Executive
Alexander R. Cruden, Chairman Department of Geological Sciences University of Toronto Erindale Campus Mississauga, ON L5L 1C6 ph: 905-828-3971 fax: 905-828-5328 email: cruden@credit.erin.utoronto.ca
Paula McKinnon, Treasurer Department of Geological Sciences Brock University St. Catharines, ON L2S 3A1 Ph: 905-688-5550 ext 3856 Fax: 905-682-9020 email: paula@craton.geol.brocku.ca
Frank Fueten, Secretary Department of Geological Sciences Brock University St. Catharines, ON L2S 3A1 Ph: 905-688-5550 ext 3856 Fax: 905-682-9020 email: ffueten@craton.geol.brocku.ca http://craton.geol.brocku.ca/faculty/ff/ff1.html
F. Fueten, Geologic image processing using the rotating polarizer stage S. Goodchild* and F. Fueten, Edge detection with the rotating polarizer stage
J. Kraus* and P.F. Williams, Porphyroblast-matrix relationships and a simple answer to porphyroblast rotation from Snow Lake, Manitoba
P. MacKinnon*, F. Fueten and P-Y. Robin, A fracture model for quartz ribbons in straight gneisses
D. Jiang* and J.C. White, Microstructures of mylonites from the East Athabasca Mylonite Triangle, northern Saskatchewan: insights into deformation mechanisms of the lower continental crust
X-O. Zhao*, S. Ji and J. Martignole, Plastic deformation and crystallographic preferred orientations of plagioclase in the high-grade Morin Terrane (Grenville Province), Quebec
P. Zhao* and S. Ji, Refinements to the shear-lag model
B. Lafrance* and B.E. John, Emplacement history of the early Proterozoic Gunnison annular complex, SW Colorado
S. Cruden, P. Evins and D. Ciceri*, Multiple scales of granitoid sheet emplacement in the Winnipeg River Subprovince: implications for batholith assembly
L. Wilkinson*, J. Harris and J. Broome, Tectonic and structural data interpretation using GIS technology: Swayze Greenstone Belt
M.R. Ghassemi* and K. Benn, Tectonic evolution of the Pontiac metasedimentary Subprovince: obduction of an accretionary prism over an active arc system
S. Ji*, G. Senechal and S. Rondenay, Obliquity between seismic and electrical anisotropies as an indicator of movement sense for ductile mantle shear zones
W. M. Schwerdtner, Kilometre-scale shear in deeply-eroded orogens: suggested new strategies for field-based structural analysis.
J.F. Dehls*, J.R. Henderson, A.R. Cruden and M. Villeneuve, Late deformation in the northern Slave structural province: evidence from granite fabrics in the High Lake greenstone belt J. Ryan* and P. Williams, Shear zone deformation in the central Flin Flon belt
M. Sanborn-Barrie*, S. Hanmer and R.G. Berman, Kramanituar complex: a preserved portion of lower crust from the central Churchill Province, NWT, Canada
U. Riller* and W.M. Schwerdtner, Deformation of the Creighton pluton and its bearing on the tectonic history of the Sudbury Basin, central Ontario
C. Long*, S. Ji, M.H. Salisbury and A.J. Calvert, Seismic reflection characteristics of folded structures: a synthetic analysis.
P. Simony, Thrust propagation, footwall synclines and inverted horses
D. Johnston* and P.F. Williams, Eocene brittle-ductile thinning of the Monashee Complex, southern Omineca Belt, southeastern B.C.
P.F. Williams* and D.H. Johnston, Development of regional scale fold nappes: an example from the Monashee Complex, Canadian Cordillera
M. de Keijzer* and P.F. Williams, F3 fold geometries in the Teslin tectonic zone, eastern Lake Laberge map area, Yukon
R.L. Brown* and R.J. Scammell, Thick-skinned thrust tectonics in the southern Canadian Cordillera
POSTERS
L. Wilkinson*, J. Harris and J. Broome, Experimental data integration techniques for regional mapping and tectonic interpretation using GIS technology
R.N. Spark* and P.F. Williams, A view through Eocene isotopic resetting: Ar-Ar cooling ages from the Monashee complex, SE British Columbia
C. Elliott* and D. Giroux, Pinning down > 1.5 Ga of fault reactivation in southern Saskatchewan
K. Saruwatari*, K. Michibayashi and I. Shimizu, Shape preferred orientation of spinel within dunite: evidence of plastically deformed peridotite in the Yakuno ophiolite, Japan
L.B. Harris, The cyclic development of extensional and contractional structures in the lower crust at a Mesoproterozoic convergent margin (eastern Albany Mobile Belt, Western Australia)
M.L. Cote* and W.M. Schwerdtner, Shear-sense reversal in Clam Lake segment of the Birch Rapids Straight Belt, Trans-Hudson Orogen
PAPERS PUBLISHED IN 1994-1995
JOURNAL OF STRUCTURAL GEOLOGY
Busch, J.P. and Van Der Pluijm, B.A., 1995. Calcite textures, microstructures and reheological properties of marble mylonites in the Bancroft shear zone, Ontario, Canada. Journal of Structural Geology, 17 (5), 677-689.
Hanmer, S., Williams, M., and Kopf, C., 1995. Modest movements, spectacular fabrics in an intracontinental deep-crustal strike-slip fault: Striding-Athabasca mylonite zone, NW Canadian Shield. Journal of Structural Geology, 17 (4), 493-509.
Housen, B.A., Van Der Pluijm, B.A., and Essene, E.J., 1995. Plastic behaviour of magnetite and high strains obtained from magnetic fabrics in the Parry Sound shear zone, Ontario Grenville Province. Journal of Structural Geology, 17 (2), 265-279.
Jiang, D. and White, J.C., 1995. Kinematics of rock flow and the interpretation of geological structures, with particular reference to shear zones. Journal of Structural Geology, 17 (9), 1249-1267.
Kirkwood, D., Malo, M., St-Julien, P., and Therrien, P., 1995. Vertical andfold-axis parallel extension within a slate belt in a transpressive setting, northern Appalachians. Journal of Structural Geology, 17 (3), 329-345.
Lebel, D. and Mountjoy, E.W., 1995. Numerical modeling of propagation and overlap of thrust faults, with application to the thrust-fold belt of central Alberta. Journal of Structural Geology, 17 (5), 631-647.
Liu, S. and Dixon, J.M., 1995. Localization of duplex thrust-ramps by buckling: analog and numerical modelling. Journal of Structural Geology, 17 (6), 875-887.
Lucas, S.B. and St-Onge, M.R., 1995. Syn-tectonic magmatism and the development of compositional layering, Ungava Orogen (northern Quebec, Canada). Journal of Structural Geology, 17 (4), 475-493.
McNicoll, V.J. and Brown, R.L., 1995. The Monashee decollement at Caribou Alp, southern flank of the Monashee complex, souther British Columbia, Canada. Journal of Structural Geology, 17 (1), 17-31.
Schwerdtner, W.M., 1995. Local displacement of diapir contacts and its importance to pluton emplacement study. Journal of Structural Geology, 17 (6), 907-911.
Schlische, R.W. and Ackerman, R.V., 1995. Kinematic significance of sediment-filled fissures in the North Mountain Basalt, Fundy rift basin, Nova Scotia, Canada. Journal of Structural Geology, 17 (7), 987-996.
Williams, P.F., Goodwin, L.B., and Lafrance, B., 1995. Brittle faulting in the Canadian Appalachians and the interpretation of reflection seismic data. Journal of Structural Geology, 17 (2), 215-233.
GEOLOGY
Chian, D., Keen, C., Reid, I., Louden, K.E. 1995. Evolution of nonvolcanic rifted margins: New results from the conjugate margins of the Labrador Sea. Geology, v. 23, pp. 589-592.
Colpron, M., and Price, R.A. 1995. Tectonic significance of the Kootenay Terrane, southeastern Canadian Cordillera: An alternative model. Geology, v.23, pp. 25-28.
Eaton, D.W., Hynes, A., Indares, A., and Rivers, T. 1995. Seismic images of eclogites, crustal-scale extension, and Moho relief in the eastern Grenville Province, Quebec. Geology, v. 23, p. 855-858.
Gilchrist, A.R., Summerfield, M.A., Cockburn, H.A.P. 1994. Landscape dissection, isostatic uplift, and the morphologic development of orogens. Geology, v.22, p.963-966.
Jackson, S.L., and Cruden, A.R. 1995. Formation of the Abitibi Greenstone Belt by arc-trench migration. Geology, v. 23, pp.471-474.
Johnston, S.T., and Erdmer, P. 1995. Hot-side-up aureole in southwest Yukon and limits on terrane assembly of the northern Canadian Cordillera. Geology, v. 23, pp. 419-422.
Lin, S., van Staal, C.R., Dub=E9, B. 1994. Promontory-promontory collision in the Canadian Appalachians. Geology, v. 22, p. 897-900.
Pinet, N., and Tremblay, A. 1995. Is the Taconian Orogeny of southern Quebec the result of an Oman-type Obduction? Geology, v. 23, pp. 121-124.
Ross, G.M., Milkereit, B., Eaton, D., White, D., Kanasewich, E.R., and Burianyk, M.J.A. 1995. Paleoproterozoic collisional orogen beneath the western Canada sedimentary basin imaged by Lithoprobe crustal seismic-reflection data. Geology, v. 23, p. 195-199.
TECTONOPHYSICS
Assameur, D.M. and Mareschal, J.-C.. 1995. Stress induced by topography and crustal density heterogeneities: implication for seismicity of southeastern Canada. Tectonophysics, v. 241, p. 179-192
Bardoux, M. and Mareschal, J.-C.. 1994. Extension in south central British Columbia: mechanical and thermal controls. Tectonophysics, v. 238, p. 451-470
Borradaile, G.J. and Werner, T., 1994. Magnetic anisotropy of some phyllosilicates. Tectonophysics v235, p. 223-248
Corriveau, L. and Leblanc, D. 1995. Sequential nesting of magmas in marble, southwestern Grenville Province, Quebec: from fracture propagation to diapirism. Tectonophysics, v. 246, p. 183-200
Erickson, S.G.,1995. Mechanics of triangle zones and passive roof duplexes: implications of finite-element models. Tectonophysics, v. 245, p. 1-11
Ji, S., Zhao, X. and Francis, D. 1994. Callibration of shear wave splitting in the subcontinental upper mantle beneath active orogenic belts using ultramafic xenoliths from the Canadian Cordillera and Alaska. Tectonophysics, v. 239, p. 1-27
Kirkwood, D.. 1995. Strain partitioning and preogressive deformation history in a transpressive belt, northern Appalachians. Tectonophysics, v. 241, p. 15-34.
Lee, H.K. and Schwarcz, H.P.. 1994. Criteria for complete zeroing of ESR signals during faulting of the San Gabrial fault zone, southern California. Tectonophysics, v. 235, p. 317-337
Lynch, G. and Tremblay, C.. 1994. Late Devonian-Carboniferous detachment faulting and extensional tectonics in western Cape Breton Island, Nova Scotia, Canada. Tectonophysics, v. 238, p. 55-69
Mareschal, J.-C.. 1994. Thermal regime and post-orogenic extension in collision belts. Tectonophysics, v. 238, p. 471-484
Miller, H.G. and Singh, V. 1995. The Avalon Terrane of Newfoundland: geophysical correlatios from onshore to offshore as evidence for Precambrian to Tertiary Structural evolution. Tectonophysics, v. 242, p. 183-197
Ranalli, G. 1994. Nonlinear flexure and equivalent mechanical thickness of the lithosphere. Tectonophysics, v. 240, p. 107-114
Ross, J.V. and Wilks, K.R.. 1995. Effects of a third phase on the mechanical and microstructural evolution of a granulite. Tectonophysics, v. 241, p. 303-315
TECTONICS
Connelly, T.N., Rivers,T. and James, D.T. 1995. Thermotectonic evolution of the Grenville Province of western Labrador. Tectonics, 14: 202-217. Crowley, J.L. and Brown, R.L. 1994. Tectonic links between the Clachnacudainn terrane and Selkirk allochthon, southern Omineca Belt, Canadian Cordillera. Tectonics, 13: 1035-1051.
Fedorowich, J.S., Kerrich, R., and Stauffer, M.R. 1995. Geodynamic evolution and thermal history of the central Flin Flon Domain, Trans-Hudson Orogen: constraints from structural development, 40Ar/39Ar, and stable isotope geothermometry. Tectonics, 14: 472-503.
Keen, C.E. and Potter, D.P. 1995. The transition from a volcanic to a nonvolcanic rifted margin off eastern Canada. Tectonics, 14: 359-371. Keen, C.E. and Potter, D.P. 1995. Formation and evolution of the Nova Scotian rifted margin: Evidence from deep seismic reflection data. Tectonics, 14: 918-932.
Keppie, J.D. and Dostal, J. 1994. Late Silurian-Early Devonian transpressional rift origin of the Quebec Reentrant, northern Appalachians: Constraints from geochemistry of volcanic rocks. Tectonics, 13: 1183-1189. Lowe,C. and Cassidy, J.F. 1995. Geophysical evidence for crustal thickness variations between the Denali and Tintina Fault Systems in west central Yukon. Tectonics, 14: 909-917.
Rusmore, M.E. and Woodsworth, G.J. 1994. Evolution of the eastern Waddington thrust belt and its relation to the mid-Cretaceous Coast Mountains arc, western British Columbia. Tectonics, 13: 1052-10167.
Van Staal, C.R. 1994. Brunswick subduction complex in the Canadian Appalachians: Record of the Late Ordovician to Late Silurian collision between Laurentia and the Gander margin of Avalon. Tectonics 13: 946-962.
Waldron, J.W.F. and Stockmal, G.S. 1994. Structural and tectonic evolution of the Humber Zone, western Nwefoundland, 2, A regional model for Acadian thrust tectonics. Tectonics, 13: 1498-1513.
JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH
Brown, M., Averkin, Y. A., McLelland, E. L. and Sawyer, E. W., 1995. Melt segregation in migmatites. Journal of Geophysical Research, 100: 15655-15679.
Brown, M., Rushmer, T. and Sawyer, E. W., 1995. Introduction to special section: Mechanisms and consequences of melt segregation from crustal protoliths. Journal of Geophysical Research, 100: 15551-15563.
Williams, M. L., Hanmer, S., C., K. and Darrach, M., 1995. Syntectonic generation and segregation of tonalitic melts from amphibolite dikes in the lower crust, Striding-Athabasca mylonite zone, Northern Saskatchewan. Journal of Geophysical Research, 100, 15717-15734.
CANADIAN JOURNAL OF EARTH SCIENCES
Graham Borradaile, M.M. Kehlenbeck and T.W. Werner. A magnetotectonic stucy correlating late Archean deformation in northwestern Ontario. CJES 1449-1460 Vol. 31 No. 9 Sept. 1994.
M.G. Bostock and J.C. VanDecar. Upper mantle structure of the northern Cascadia subduction zone. CJES 1-12 Vol. 32 No. 1 Jan. 1995. G. Camir=E9. Development of inverted metamorphic gradient in the internal domain of the Taconian belt, Gasp=E9 Peninsula. CJES 37-51 Vol. 32 No. 1 Jan. 1995.
P. Durling, K. Howells, and P., Harvey. The near-surface geology of St. Georges Bay, Nova Scotia: implications for the Hollow Fault. CJES 603-613 Vol. 32 No. 5 May 1995.
C.L. Fergusson and P.A. Cawood. Structural history of the metamorphic sole of the Bay of Islands Complex, western Newfoundland. CJES 533-544 Vol. 32 No. 5 May 1995.
Simon Hanmer, Michael Williams, and Chris Kopf. Striding-Athabasca mylonite zone: implications for the Archean and Early Proterozoic tectonics of the western Canadian Shield. CJES 178-196 Vol. 32 No. 2 Feb. 1995.
H. Ruth Jackson and I. Reid. Crustal thickness variations between the Greenland and Ellesmere Island margins determined from seismic refraction. CJES 1407-1418 Vol. 31 No. 9 Sept. 1994.
S. Lacroix and E.W. Sawyer. An Archean fold-thrust belt in the northwestern Abitibi Greenstone Belt: structural and seismic evidence. CJES 97-112 Vol. 32 No. 2 Feb. 1995.
Shoufa Lin. Structural evolution and tectonic significance of the Eastern Highlands shear zone in Cape Breton Island, the Canadian Appalachians. CJES 545-554 Vol. 32 No. 5 May 1995.
Kate MacLachlan and Herb Helmstaedt. Geology and geochemistry of an Archean mafic dike complex in the Chan Formation: basis for a revised plate-tectonic model of the Yelloknife greenstone belt. CJES 614-630 Vol. 32 No. 5 May 1995.
Adrion F. Park, Paul F. Williams, Steven Raiser, and Albert L=E9ger. Geometry and kinematics of a major crustal shear zone segment in the Appalachians of southern New Brunswick. CJES 1523-1535 Vol. 31 No. 10 Oct. 1994.
G.D. Spence and D.T. Long. Transition from oceanic to continental crustal structure: seismic and gravity models at the Queen Charlotte transform margin. CJES 699-717 Vol. 32 No. 6 June 1995.
Joe Wallach, Keith Benn, and Rolly Rimando. Recent, tectonically induced, surficial stress-relief structures in the Ottawa-Hull area, Canada. CJES 325-333 Vol. 32 No. 3 March 1995.
Kelin Wang, Herb Dragert and H. Jay Melosh. Finite element study of uplift and strain across Vancouver Island. CJES 1510-1522 Vol. 31 No. 10 Oct. 1994.
Jianjun Wu, Bernd Milkereit, and Avid Boerner. Timing constraints on deformation history of the Sudbury Impact Structure. CJES 1654-1660 Vol. 31 No. 11 Nov. 1994.
GEOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF AMERICA BULLETIN
Cook, F. A. and Van der Velden, A. J., 1995. Three-dimensional crustal structure of the Purcell anticlinorium in the Cordillera of southwestern Canada. GSAB, 107: 642-664.
Tremblay, A. and Pinet, N., 1995. Distribution and characteristics of Taconian and Acadian deformation, southern Qu=E9bec Appalachians. GSAB, 106: 1172-1181.
BULLETIN OF CANADIAN PETROLEUM GEOLOGY
Eaton et al., 1995, Lithoprobe basin-wide seismic profiling in Central Alberta. Bull. Can. Petr. Geol., v.43, pp.65-77.
OTHER SUBMISSIONS
Halls, H.C. and Zhang, B., 1995. Magnetic polarity domains in the early Proterozoic Matachewan dyke swarm, Canada: A novel method for mapping major faults. in: Baer and Heimann (eds), Physics and Chemistry of Dykes, Balkema, Rotterdam, p. 165-170.