Acasta Gneiss

The Acasta Gneiss Complex, also called the Acasta Gneiss, is a body of felsic to ultramafic Archean basement rocks, gneisses, that form the northwestern edge of the Slave Craton in the Northwest Territories, Canada, about 300 km (190 mi) north of Yellowknife, Canada. This geologic complex consists largely of tonalitic and granodioritic gneisses and lesser amounts of mafic and ultramafic gneisses. It underlies and is largely concealed by thin, patchy cover of Quaternary glacial sediments over an area of about 13,000 km2 (5,000 sq mi). The Acasta Gneiss Complex contains fragments of the oldest known crust and record of more than a billion years (>4.0–2.9 Ga) of magmatism and metamorphism. The Acasta Gneiss Complex is exposed in a set of anticlinoriums within the foreland fold and thrust belt of the Paleoproterozoic Wopmay Orogen.

Acasta Gneiss Complex
Stratigraphic range:
Archean
~
TypeComplex
Sub-unitsIdiwhaa tonalitic gneiss
UnderliesCentral Slave Cover Group
Area> 13,000 km (8,100 mi)
Thicknessunknown
Lithology
Primarytonalitic and granodioritic orthogneisses
Othermafic and ultramafic gneisses
Location
RegionSlave Craton, Northwest Territories
CountryCanada
Type section
Named forAcasta River
Named byJ. E. King
Year defined1985
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