Volcanism of Canada, a
country occupying much of the northern part of
North America, produces
lava flows,
lava
plateaus,
lava domes,
cinder cones,
stratovolcanoes,
shield volcanoes,
submarine volcanoes,
calderas,
diatremes, and
maars, along with examples of more less common
volcanic forms such as
tuyas and
subglacial mounds. It has a very complex
volcanological history spanning from the
Precambrian period at least 3.11 billion
years ago when this part of the North American continent began to
form.
Although
the country's volcanic activity dates back to the Precambrian
period, volcanism continues to occur in Western and Northern Canada where it forms part of an
encircling chain of volcanoes and frequent earthquakes around the Pacific Ocean
called the Pacific
Ring of Fire. But because volcanoes in Western and Northern
Canada are in remote rugged areas and the level of volcanic
activity is less frequent than with other volcanoes around the
Pacific Ocean, Canada is commonly thought to occupy a gap in the
Pacific Ring of Fire between the volcanoes of western United States
to the south and the Aleutian volcanoes
of Alaska
to the
north. However, the mountainous landscape of Western and
Northern Canada includes more than 100 volcanoes that have
been active during the past two million years and have claimed many
lives. Volcanic activity has been responsible for many of Canada's
geological and geographical features and
mineralization, including the
nucleus of
North America called the
Canadian Shield.
Volcanism has led to the formation of hundreds of volcanic areas
and extensive lava formations across Canada, indicating volcanism
played a major role in shaping its surface. The country's different
volcano and lava types originate from different
tectonic settings and
types of volcanic eruptions,
ranging from passive
lava
eruptions to violent
explosive
eruptions. Canada has a rich record of very large volumes of
magmatic rock called
large
igneous provinces. They are represented by deep-level plumbing
systems consisting of giant
dike swarms,
sill provinces and layered
intrusions. The most capable large igneous
provinces in Canada are
Archean (3,800–2,500
million years ago) age
greenstone
belts containing a rare volcanic rock called
komatiite.
Eruption styles and volcano formations
Hawaiian eruptions

Hawaiian eruption: 1: ash plume, 2:
lava fountain, 3: crater, 4: lava lake, 5: fumaroles, 6: lava flow,
7: layers of lava and ash, 8: stratum, 9: sill, 10: magma conduit,
11: magma chamber, 12: dike
Hawaiian eruptions are passive eruptions characterized by effusive
emission of highly fluid basalt lavas with low gas contents. Like
other Hawaiian eruptions, the relative volume of ejected
pyroclastic material is less than that of all other eruption types.
The main phenomenons during Hawaiian eruptions is steady
lava fountaining and the production of thin
lava flows that eventually build up into large, broad
shield volcanoes. Eruptions are also common
in central vents near the summit of shield volcanoes, and along
linear volcanic vents radiating outward
from the summit area. Lava advances downslope away from their
source vents in lava channels and
lava
tubes.

Eve Cone, one of the best preserved
cinder cones in Canada.
In Canada,
cinder cones form when lava
fountains release fragments of lava that harden in the air and fall
around a linear volcanic vent. The rock fragments, often known as
cinder or
scoria, are
glassy and contain gas bubbles "frozen" into
place as magma exploded into the air and then cooled quickly. Some
of the lava is not fragmented and flows from the vent as a lava
flow. Cinder cones are also called pyroclastic cones and are found
in
volcanic fields, on the flanks of
shield volcanoes, stratovolcanoes and calderas.
For example,
geologists have identified at least 30 young cinder cones on the
Mount Edziza
volcanic complex
, a large shield volcano in northwestern British
Columbia with an area of . Eve
Cone
, on the northern end of the Mount Edziza volcanic
complex, is one of the best preserved cinder cones in Canada, due
to its undeformed and symmetrical shape.
During other Hawaiian eruptions, fluid basaltic lava may pond in
vents,
craters, or broad depressions
to produce
lava lakes. As lava lakes
solidify, they create a grey-silver crust that is usually only a
few centimeters thick. Active lava lakes comprise young crust that
is repeatedly destroyed and regenerated. Convective motion of the
underlying lava causes the crust to break into slabs and sink. This
then exposes new lava at the surface that cools into a new crustal
layer which will again fracture into slabs and be recycled into the
circulating lava beneath the crust.
Phreatic and phreatomagmatic eruptions

Phreatic eruption: 1: water vapor
cloud, 2: volcanic bomb, 3: magma conduit, 4: layers of lava and
ash, 5: stratum, 6: water table, 7: explosion, 8: magma
chamber
Phreatic eruptions occur when rising magma makes contact with
ground or surface water. The extreme temperature of the magma
causes near-instantaneous evaporation, resulting in an explosion of
steam, water, ash, rocks and
volcanic
bombs. The temperature of the rock fragments can range from
cold to incandescent. If magma is included, the term
phreatomagmatic may be used. Phreatomagmatic eruptions occasionally
create broad, low-relief
volcanic
craters called
maars. These explosion
craters are interpreted to have formed above rubble-filled
volcanic pipes called
diatremes; deep erosion of a maar presumably would
expose a diatreme. Maars range in size from across and from deep
and are commonly filled with water to form a
crater lake.
Fiftytwo Ridge
at the southeastern end of Wells Gray
Provincial Park
in southeastern British Columbia is an example of a
volcano containing lake-filled maars. Most maars have low
rims composed of a mixture of loose fragments of volcanic rocks and
rocks torn from the walls of the diatreme. Phreatic explosions can
be accompanied by
carbon dioxide or
hydrogen sulfide gas
emissions.
Subglacial eruptions

Subglacial eruption: 1: water vapor
cloud, 2: lake, 3: ice, 4: layers of lava and ash, 5: strata, 6:
pillow lava, 7: magma conduit, 8: magma chamber, 9: dike
Subglacial eruptions occur when lava erupts under large portions of
glacial ice. As lava erupts under a large glacier, the heat of the
lava would immediately start to melt the overlying glacial ice to
produce
meltwater. The resulting meltwater
would quickly harden the lava to produce pillow-shaped masses
called
pillow lava. In places, the
pillow lava will fracture to create other types of volcanic
deposits called pillow breccia, tuff breccia, and
hyaloclastite. If magma intruded and melted a
vertical pipe through the overlying glacier, the partially molten
mass would cool as a large block with gravity flattening its upper
surface to form a flat-topped, steep-sided
subglacial volcano called a
tuya.
The term tuya originates from Tuya Butte
in far northern British Columbia. While
still in graduate school in 1947, Canadian geologist
William Henry Mathews coined the term "tuya" to
refer to these distinctive volcanic formations and was one of the
first people on Earth to describe in detail these types of
subglacial volcanoes. Tuya Butte is the first such landform
analyzed in the geological literature, and its name has since
become standard worldwide among volcanologists in referring to and
writing about tuyas. Other subglacial volcanoes, including
subglacial mounds, are formed when the
erupted magma is not hot enough to melt through the overlying
glacial ice. Once the glaciers melt away, the tuyas and subglacial
mounds would reappear with a distinctive shape as a result of their
confinement within glacial ice.
Because volcanic activity in Western and Northern Canada was
contemporaneous with the ebb and flow of past glaciations, other
volcanoes display ice-contact features.
Mount
Garibaldi
in
southwestern British Columbia is the only major volcano in North
America known to have formed upon a regional ice sheet during the
last glacial period, which began
110,000 years ago and ended between 10,000 and
15,000 years ago. Hoodoo Mountain
in northern British Columbia was contained within
basins thawed in the ice and assumed the flat-topped, steep-sided
form of a tuya. Pyramid Mountain
, in the Shuswap Highland
of east-central British Columbia, was formed under
more than of glacial ice to assume the form of a subglacial
mound. The Fort Selkirk Volcanic Field
in central Yukon
contains
volcanic features that were erupted subglacially when the large
Cordilleran Ice Sheet existed
in this area between 0.8 and one million years
ago.
Submarine eruptions

Submarine eruption: 1: water vapor
cloud, 2: water, 3: stratum, 4: lava flow, 5: magma conduit, 6:
magma chamber, 7: dike, 8: pillow lava
Submarine eruptions are eruptions that occur underwater. The
appearance of these eruptions is different than those that occur on
land. When lava erupts it will be quickly cooled by the unlimited
supply of water surrounding a
submarine volcano, creating pillow lava.
Explosive fragmentation of lavas forms hyaloclastites. Deep-sea
submarine eruptions usually occur where the ocean floor is being
pulled apart by
plate tectonic
movements called
mid-ocean ridges,
where about 75% of the Earth's magmatic eruptions occur.
Shallow
submarine eruptions can cause explosions of steam and volcanic ash
called Surtseyan eruptions, named
for the island of Surtsey
off the southern coast of Iceland. Explosive
submarine eruptions usually eject large quantities of very light
volcanic rock called
pumice. This very light
volcanic rock can initially float on water, forming
long-lived rafts of floating pumice carried long
distances from the volcano by ocean currents. Lava flows entering
water can cause explosions that form piles of ash and rubble
similar to cinder cones, although they were formed from
rootless vents not located above a magma
conduit.
The deformed volcanic sequences that form
greenstone belts in the
Canadian Shield contain hyaloclastite and
pillow lavas, indicating these areas were once below
sea level and the lava was rapidly cooled
underwater. Pillow lavas more than two billion years old indicate
large submarine volcanoes existed during the early stages of the
Earth's formation.
Peléan eruptions

Peléan eruption: 1: ash plume, 2:
volcanic ash rain, 3: lava dome, 4: volcanic bomb, 5: pyroclastic
flow, 6: layers of lava and ash, 7: strata, 8: magma conduit, 9:
magma chamber, 10: dike

Plinian eruption: 1: ash plume, 2:
magma conduit, 3: volcanic ash rain, 4: layers of lava and ash, 5:
stratum, 6: magma chamber
Peléan eruptions are violent eruptions characterized by fast-moving
streams of hot
volcanic gas and rock
called
pyroclastic flows or nuées
ardentes.
Named for the stratovolcano Mount
Pelée
on the island of Martinique
in the Caribbean Sea
, Peléan eruptions occur when thick magma, typically
of rhyolite, dacite
and andesite type, is involved, and share
some similarities with another type of explosive eruption known as
Vulcanian eruptions. The
thick magma associated with Peléan eruptions can form
lava domes and
lava
spines in the volcano's vent or on the volcano's summit. Lava
domes are steep-sided lava masses frequently circular in plan view
and spiny, rounded, or flat on top. If a lava dome is created, it
may later collapse, forming an ash column and sending flows of ash
and hot
volcanic blocks down the
volcano's flanks. Lava spines are upright cylindrical masses of
lava caused by the upward squeezing of pasty lava inside a volcanic
vent.
Plinian eruptions
Plinian eruptions are large explosive eruptions that form
pyroclastic flows and enormous dark columns of tephra and gas that
commonly rise into the
second layer of the
Earth's atmosphere.
Named for Italian
natural
philosopher Pliny the Younger,
these spectacularly explosive eruptions are associated with magmas
of high viscosity and gas content such as dacite and rhyolite and
typically occur at calderas and stratovolcanoes. The duration of these
eruptions is highly variable, ranging from hours to days, and they
commonly occur at
volcanic arcs where
the Earth's tectonic plates are moving towards one another, with
one sliding underneath the other called a
subduction zone. Although Plinian eruptions
typically involve magma with high levels of silica, such as dacite
and rhyolite, they can occasionally occur at volcanoes
characterized by passive basaltic eruptions, including shield
volcanoes, when the magma chambers become differentiated and zoned
to create a siliceous top. In some cases, a basaltic shield volcano
may have periods of explosive activity to form a stratovolcano
mounted on top of the shield volcano. An example of this activity
includes the massive
Level Mountain
Range shield volcano in northwestern British Columbia, which is
capped by a dissected stratovolcano.
Following massive Plinian eruptions, temperatures may decrease to
cause
volcanic winters. Volcanic
winters are caused by volcanic ash and droplets of
sulfuric acid obscuring the sun's light,
usually after a volcanic eruption.
A massive (VEI-7) Plinian eruption in 1815
from Mount
Tambora
on the island of Sumbawa
, Indonesia
expelled more than of volcanic ash around the Earth, causing
particularly long, dark and harsh volcanic winters in Eastern
Canada from 1816 to 1818. The result of this was the large
amount of volcanic ash blocking out the
sun's
light, causing the Earth's temperature and visibility to decrease.
The first
volcanic winter in 1816, known as the Year Without a Summer, affected the
Canadian province of Newfoundland and Labrador
. In February 1816, a fire swept through
St. John's
, leaving 1,000 people homeless and in May
during the following year, frost killed most of the crops that had
been planted. In June, two large
winter storms occurred throughout Eastern
Canada, resulting in several casualties. The cause was limited
amount of food supplies, and further deaths from those who, in a
hunger-weakened state, then succumbed to disease.
Nearly a foot of snow
was observed in Quebec
City
. Rapid, dramatic temperature swings were
common, with temperatures sometimes reverting from normal or
above-normal summer temperatures as high as 35°C to near-freezing
within hours. In November 1817, two more fires swept through St.
John's, leaving another 2,000 people poor. Many who had
somewhere to live had low amounts of food or fuel for heating.
The
volcanic winters were also felt in the Maritime provinces, which includes Nova Scotia
, New
Brunswick
and Prince
Edward Island
.
Eastern Canada
The 2,677 million year old
Abitibi greenstone belt in Ontario
and Quebec is one of the largest Archean greenstone belts on Earth
and one of the youngest parts of the
Superior craton which sequentially forms
part of the Canadian Shield.
Komatiite
lavas in the Abitibi greenstone belt (pictured) occur in four
lithotectonic assemblages known as Pacaud, Stoughton-Roquemaure,
Kidd-Munro and Tisdale. The
Swayze greenstone belt further south
is interpreted to be a southwestern extension of the Abitibi
greenstone belt.
The
Archean Red Lake greenstone belt in western
Ontario consists of basaltic and komatiitic volcanics ranging in
age from 2,925 to 2,940 million years old and younger
rhyolite-andesite volcanics ranging in age from 2,730 to
2,750 million years old. It is situated in the western portion
of the
Uchi Subprovince, a volcanic
sequence comprising a number of greenstone belts.
The
1884–1864 million year old Circum-Superior Belt constitutes a
large igneous province extending for more than from the Labrador Trough in Labrador and northeastern Quebec though the
Cape Smith Belt in northern Quebec,
the Belcher
Islands
in southern Nunavut
, the Fox River and
Thompson belts in northern Manitoba
, the Winnipegosis komatiite belt in
central Manitoba, and on the southern side of the Superior craton
in the Animikie Basin of northwestern Ontario. Two
volcano-sedimentary sequences exist in the Labrador Trough with
ages of 2,170–2,140 million years and 1,883–1,870 million
years. In the Cape Smith Belt, two
volcanic groups range in age from
2,040 to 1,870 million years old called the Povungnituk
volcano-sedimentary Group and the Chukotat Group. The Belcher
Islands in eastern Hudson Bay contain two volcanic sequences known
as the Flaherty and Eskimo volcanics. The Fox River Belt consists
of volcanics, sills and sediments some 1,883 million years old
while magmatism of the Thompson Belt is dated to 1,880 million
years old. To the south lies the 1,864 million year old
Winnipegosis komatiites. In the Animikie Basin near Lake Superior,
volcanism is dated 1,880 million years old.
During the
Mesoproterozoic era of
the
Precambrian period
1,109 million years ago, northwestern Ontario began to split
apart to form the
Midcontinent
Rift System, also called the Keweenawan Rift.
Lava flows created by
the rift in the Lake
Superior
area were
formed from basaltic magma. The upwelling of this magma was
the result of a
hotspot which
produced a
triple junction in the
vicinity of Lake Superior. The hotspot made a dome that covered the
Lake Superior area.
Voluminous basaltic lava flows erupted from
the central axis of the rift, similar to the rifting that formed
the Atlantic
Ocean
. A
failed
arm extends north into mainland Ontario where it forms a
geological formation known as the Nipigon Embayment.
This failed arm
includes Lake
Nipigon
, the largest lake entirely within the boundaries of
Ontario.
Periods of volcanic activity occurred throughout central Canada
during the
Jurassic and
Cretaceous periods. The source for this volcanism
was a long-lived and stationary area of molten rock called the
New England or Great Meteor
hotspot.
The first event erupted kimberlite magma in
the James
Bay
lowlands region of northern Ontario
180 million years ago, creating the Attawapiskat
kimberlite field
. Another kimberlite event spanned a period
of 13 million years 165 to 152 million years ago,
creating the
Kirkland
Lake kimberlite field in northeastern Ontario. Another period
of kimberlite volcanism occurred in northeastern Ontaio 154 to
134 million years ago, creating the
Lake Timiskaming kimberlite
field.
As the North American Plate moved westward
over the New England hotspot, the New England hotspot created the
magma intrusions of the Monteregian
Hills
in Montreal
in southern Quebec. These intrusive stocks
have been variously interpreted as the feeder intrusions of long
extinct volcanoes that would have
been active 125 million years ago, or as intrusions that never
breached the surface in volcanic activity. The lack of a noticeable
hotspot track west of the Monteregian Hills might be due either to
failure of the New England mantle plume to pass through massive
strong rock of the Canadian Shield, the lack of noticeable
intrusions, or to strengthening of the New England mantle plume
when it approached the Monteregian Hills region.

Basal contact of a lava flow section
of the Fundy Basin
About 250 million years ago during the early
Triassic period, Atlantic Canada lied roughly in
the middle of a giant continent called
Pangaea.
This supercontinent began to fracture
220 million years ago when the Earth's lithosphere was being pulled apart from
extensional stress, creating a divergent plate boundary known as the
Fundy
Basin
. The focus of the rifting began somewhere
between where present-day eastern North America and northwestern
Africa were joined.
During the formation
of the Fundy Basin, volcanic activity never stopped as shown by the
going eruption of lava along the Mid-Atlantic Ridge; an underwater
volcanic mountain range in the
Atlantic
Ocean
formed as a result of continuous seafloor spreading between eastern North
America and northwestern Africa. As the Fundy Basin
continued to form 201 million years ago, a series of basaltic lava
flows were erupted, forming a volcanic mountain range on the
mainland
portion of southwestern Nova Scotia
known as North Mountain, stretching from
Brier
Island
in the south to Cape Split
in the north. This series of lava
flows cover most of the Fundy Basin and extend under the Bay of Fundy
where parts of it are exposed on the shore at the
rural community of Five Islands
, east of Parrsboro
on the north side of the bay. Large dikes
wide exist throughout southernmost New Brunswick with ages and
compositions similar to the North Mountain basalt, indicating these
dikes were the source for North Mountain lava flows. However, North
Mountain is the remnants of a larger volcanic feature that has now
been largely eroded based on the existence of basin border faults
and erosion.
The hard basaltic ridge of North Mountain
resisted the grinding of ice sheets that
flowed over this region during the past ice
ages, and now forms one side of the Annapolis Valley
in the western part of the Nova Scotia
peninsula
. The layering of a North Mountain lava flow
less than thick at McKay Head, closely resemble that of some
Hawaiian
lava lakes, indicating
Hawaiian eruptions occurred during
the formation of North Mountain.

Satellite image of the Newfoundland
Seamounts.
The
Fogo
Seamounts
, located
offshore of Newfoundland to the southwest of the Grand
Banks
, consists of submarine volcanoes with dates
extending back to the Early
Cretaceous period at least 143 million years ago.
They may have one or two origins. The Fogo Seamounts could have
formed along fracture zones in the Atlantic seafloor because of the
large number of seamounts on the North American
continental shelf. The other explanation
for their origin is they formed above a
mantle plume associated with the
Canary or
Azores
hotspots in the Atlantic Ocean, based on the existence of older
seamounts to the northwest and younger seamounts to the southeast.
The existence of
flat-topped seamounts
throughout the Fogo Seamount chain indicate some of these seamounts
would once have stood above
sea level as
islands that would have been volcanically active. Their flatness is
due to coastal erosion, such as waves and winds.
Other submarine
volcanoes offshore of Eastern Canada include the poorly studied
Newfoundland
Seamounts
.
Western Canada
The
Flin Flon greenstone belt
in central Manitoba and east-central Saskatchewan
is a collage of deformed volcanic arc rocks ranging in age from 1,904 to
1,864 million years old during the Paleoproterozoic sub-division of the
Precambrian period. Volcanic activity between 1,890 and
1,864 million years ago produced
calc-alkaline andesite-rhyolite magmas and
rare
shoshonite and trachyandesite magmas
while the 1,904 million year old arc volcanism occurred in one
or more separate volcanic arcs that were possibly characterized by
rapid subduction of thin oceanic crust and large
back-arc basins. In contrast, the younger
1,890 million year old volcanics indicate evidence of crustal
thickening. This was due to long-term growth of the volcanic arcs
by continuous volcanic activity and tectonic thickening associated
with arc collisions and successive arc deformation. This in turn
followed a massive mountain building event called the
Trans-Hudson orogeny.
The
Cretaceous era 145-65 million years
ago was a period for active kimberlite volcanism in the
Western Canadian Sedimentary
Basin of Alberta and Saskatchewan. The
Fort à la Corne kimberlite
field in central Saskatchewan formed 104 to
95 million years ago during the
Early Cretaceous. Unlike most kimberlite
fields on Earth, the Fort à la Corne kimberlite field formed during
more than one eruptive event. Its kimberlites are among the most
complete examples on Earth, preserving kimberlite pipes and
maar volcanoes. The
Northern Alberta kimberlite
province consists of three kimberlite fields known as the
Birch Mountains,
Buffalo Head
Hills and the
Mountain Lake
cluster. The Birch Mountains kimberlite field consists of eight
kimberlite pipes known as
Phoenix,
Dragon,
Xena,
Legend and
Valkyrie, dating approximately 75 million
years old. The Buffalo Head Hills kimberlite field was dominated by
explosive kimberlite volcanism from 88 million years ago to
81 million years ago, forming
maars.
Kimberlites of the Buffalo Head Hills field are similar to those
associated with the Fort à la Corne kimberlite field in central
Saskatchewan. The kimberlite pipes of the Mountain Lake cluster
were formed during a similar timespan with the Birch Mountains
field 77 million years ago.
Formation of the Pacific Northwest

Plate tectonics of the Intermontane
Islands arc 195 million years ago.
The Canadian portion of the
Pacific
Northwest began forming during the early
Jurassic period when a group of active volcanic
islands collided against a pre-existing
continental margin and coastline of
Western Canada. These volcanic islands, known as the
Intermontane Islands by geoscientists,
were formed on a pre-existing
tectonic
plate called the
Intermontane
Plate about 245 million years ago by
subduction of the former
Insular Plate to its west during the
Triassic period. This subduction zone records
another subduction zone called the
Intermontane Trench under an ancient
ocean between the Intermontane Islands and the former continential
margin of Western Canada called the
Slide Mountain Ocean. This arrangement
of two parallel subduction zones is unusual in that very few twin
subduction zones exist on Earth; the
Philippine Mobile Belt off the
eastern coast of
Asia is an example of a modern
twin subduction zone. As the Intermontane Plate drew closer to the
pre-existing continental margin by ongoing
subduction under the Slide Mountain Ocean, the
Intermontane Islands drew closer to the former continential margin
and coastline of Western Canada, supporting a volcanic arc on the
former continental margin of Western Canada. As the
North American Plate drifted west and
the Intermontane Plate continued to drift east to the ancient
continental margin of Western Canada, the Slide Mountain Ocean
began to close by ongoing subduction under the Slide Mountain
Ocean. This subduction zone eventually jammed and shut down
completely about 180 million years ago, ending the arc
volcanism on the ancient continential margin of Western Canada and
the Intermontane Islands collided, forming a long chain of deformed
volcanic and sedimentary rock called the
Intermontane Belt, which consists of
deeply cut valleys, high plateaus, and rolling uplands. This
collision also crushed and
fold
sedimentary and
igneous rocks, creating a
mountain range called the Kootenay Fold Belt
which existed in far eastern British Columbia.

Plate tectonics of the Omineca and
Insular arcs 130 million years ago.
After the sedimentary and igneous rocks were folded and crushed, it
resulted in the creation of a new continental shelf and coastline.
The Insular Plate continued to subduct under the new continental
shelf and coastline about 130 million years ago during the mid
Cretaceous period after the formation of
the Intermontane Belt, supporting a new continental volcanic arc
called the
Omineca Arc. Magma rising
from the Omineca Arc successfully connected the Intermontane Belt
to the mainland of Western Canada, forming a chain of volcanoes in
British Columbia that existed discontinuously for about
60 million years. The ocean lying offshore during this period
is called the
Bridge River Ocean.
It was also during this period when another group of active
volcanic islands existed along the newly built continental shelf
and coastline. These volcanic islands, known as the
Insular Islands, were formed on the Insular
Plate by subduction of the former
Farallon Plate to its west during the early
Paleozoic period. As the
North American Plate drifted west and
the Insular Plate drifted east to the continential margin of
Western Canada, the Bridge River Ocean began to close by ongoing
subduction under the Bridge River Ocean. This subduction zone
eventually jammed and shut down completely 115 million years
ago, ending the Omineca Arc volcanism and the Insular Islands
collided, forming the
Insular Belt.
Compression resulting from this collision crushed, fractured and
folded rocks along the continental
margin. The Insular Belt then welded onto the continental margin by
magma that eventually cooled to create a large mass of
igneous rock, creating a new continental
margin. This large mass of igneous rock is the largest
granite outcropping in North America.

Plate tectonics of the Coast Range Arc
100 million years ago.
The Farallon Plate continued to subduct under the new continental
margin of Western Canada after the Insular Plate and Insular
Islands collided with the former continental margin, supporting a
new chain of volcanoes on the mainland of Western Canada called the
Coast Range Arc about
100 million years ago during the
Late Cretaceous period. Magma ascending from
the Farallon Plate under the new continential margin burned their
way upward through the newly accreted Insular Belt, injecting huge
quantities of granite into older igneous rocks of the Insular Belt.
At the surface, new volcanoes were built along the continental
margin. The basement of this arc was likely Early Cretaceous and
Late Jurassic age intrusions from the
Insular Islands.

Plate tectonics of the Coast Range Arc
about 75 million years ago
One of the major aspects that changed early during the Coast Range
Arc was the status of the northern end of the Farallon Plate, a
portion now known as the
Kula Plate.
About 85 million years ago, the Kula Plate broke off from the
Farallon Plate to form an area of
seafloor spreading called the
Kula-Farallon Ridge. This change
apparently had some important ramifications for regional geologic
evolution. When this change was completed, Coast Range Arc
volcanism returned and sections of the arc were uplifted
considerably in latest Cretaceous time. This started a period of
mountain building that affected much of western North America
called the
Laramide orogeny. In
particular a large area of dextral transpression and
southwest-directed thrust faulting was active from 75 to
65 million years ago. Much of the record of this deformation
has been overridden by
Tertiary age
structures and the zone of Cretaceous dextral thrust faulting
appears to have been widespread. It was also during this period
when massive amounts of molten granite intruded highly deformed
ocean rocks and assorted fragments from pre-existing island arcs,
largely remnants of the Bridge River Ocean. This molten granite
burned the old oceanic sediments into a glittering medium-grade
metamorphic rock called
schist. The older intrusions of the Coast Range Arc
were then deformed under the heat and pressure of later intrusions,
turning them into layered metamorphic rock known as
gneiss. In some places, mixtures of older intrusive
rocks and the original oceanic rocks have been distorted and warped
under intense heat, weight and stress to create unusual swirled
patters known as
migmatite, appearing to
have been nearly melted in the procedure.
Volcanism began to decline along the length of the arc about
60 million years ago during the
Albian
and
Aptian faunal
stages of the Cretaceous period. This resulted from the
changing geometry of the Kula Plate, which progressively developed
a more northerly movement along the mainland of Western Canada.
Instead of subducting beneath Western Canada, the Kula Plate began
subducting underneath southwestern Yukon and Alaska during the
early
Eocene period. Volcanism along the
entire length of the Coast Range Arc shut down about
50 million years ago and many of the volcanoes have
disappeared from erosion.
What remains of the Coast Range Arc to this
day are outcrops of granite when magma intruded and cooled at depth
beneath the volcanoes, forming the Coast Mountains
. During construction of intrusions
70 and 57 million years ago, the northern motion of the
Kula Plate might have been between and per year. However, other
geologic studies determined the Kula Plate moved at a rate as fast
as per year.
Cascadia subduction zone complexes
As the last of the Kula Plate decayed and the Farallon Plate
advanced back into this area from the south, it once again started
to subduct under the continental margin of Western Canada
37 million years ago, supporting a chain of volcanoes called
the
Cascade Volcanic Arc. At least
four volcanic formations along the
British Columbia Coast are associated
with Cascadia subduction zone volcanism.
The oldest is the
eroded 18 million year old Pemberton Volcanic Belt which
extends west-northwest from south-central British Columbia to the
Queen
Charlotte Islands
in the northeast where it lies west of mainland
British Columbia. In the south it is defined by a group of
epizonal intrusions and a few erosional remnants of eruptive rock.
Farther
north in the large Ha-Iltzuk
and Waddington icefields, it includes two large
dissected calderas called Silverthrone Caldera
and Franklin Glacier Volcano
while the Queen Charlotte Islands to the
northeast contain a volcanic formation ranging in age from
Miocene to Pliocene
called the Masset Formation.
Although widely separated from each other, all Pemberton Belt rocks
are of similar age and have similar magma compositions. Therefore
these magmatic rocks are believed to be products of arc volcanism
related to subduction of the Farallon Plate. By late
Pliocene time the Farallon Plate had been greatly
reduced in size and its northern portion ultimately broke off
between five and seven million years ago to form a new plate
boundary called the
Nootka Fault.
This
rupture created the two small Juan de
Fuca and Explorer plates that
currently lie off the west coast of Vancouver Island
.

Map of the Garibaldi Volcanic
Belt
The four
million year old Garibaldi
Volcanic Belt, a north-south trending zone of volcanoes and
volcanic rock in the southern Coast Mountains
of southwestern British Columbia, can be grouped
into at least three enechelon segments, referred to as the
northern, central, and southern segments. The northern segment
overlaps the older Pemberton Volcanic Belt at a low angle near
Mount
Meager
where Garibaldi Belt lavas rest on uplifted and
deeply eroded remnants of Pemberton Belt subvolcanic intrusions and
combines to form a single belt. A few isolated volcanoes
northwest of Mount Meager, such as Silverthrone Caldera and
Franklin Glacier Volcano, are also grouped as part of the Garibaldi
Volcanic Belt. However, their tectonic origins are largely
unexplained and are a matter of going research. When the Farallon
Plate ruptured to create the Nootka Fault between five and seven
million years ago, there were some apparent changes along the
Cascadia subduction zone. At issue is the current plate
configuration and rate of
subduction but
based on rock composition is for Silverthrone Caldera and Franklin
Glacier Volcano to be subduction related. The roughly circular,
wide, deeply dissected Silverthrone Caldera in the northern segment
of the Garibaldi Volcanic Belt, was formed one million years ago
during the
Early Pleistocene
period. The bulk of the volcano was erupted 0.4 million years
ago, but younger phases, consisting of lava flows and subsidiary
volcanoes with compositions of andesite and basaltic-andesite are
also present.
Mount Silverthrone
, an eroded lava dome on
the northeast edge of Silverthrone Caldera, was episodically active
during both Pemberton and Garibaldi stages of volcanism.
The
eroded Franklin
Glacier Volcano
just to the southeast consists of dacite and
andesite rocks that range in age from 3.9 to 2.2 million
years old. Southeast of Franklin Glacier Volcano, the
Bridge River
Cones
comprise remnants of both andesitic and alkali
basalt cones and lava flows. These range in age from about
one million years old to 0.5 million years old and commonly
display ice-contact features related to
subglacial eruptions. Mount Meager, the
most persistent volcano in the northern portion of the Garibaldi
Volcanic Belt, is a complex of at least four overlapping
stratovolcanoes made of dacite and rhyodacite that become
progressively younger from south to north, ranging in age from two
million to 2,490 years old. The central segment of the
Garibaldi Volcanic Belt is defined by a group of eight volcanoes on
a ridge of highland east of the
Squamish
River, and by remnants of basaltic lava flows preserved in the
adjacent Squamish valley.
Mount Cayley
, the largest and most persistent volcano, is a
deeply eroded stratovolcano comprising a lava dome complex made of
dacite and minor rhyodacite ranging in age from 3.8 to
0.31 million years old. Mount Fee
, a narrow volcanic
plug made of rhyodacite about long and wide, rises above the
highland ridge. Complete denudation of the central spine as
well as the absence of till under lava flows from Mount Fee suggest
a preglacial age.
The other volcanoes of the central Garibaldi
Belt, including Ember Ridge, Pali Dome
, Cauldron Dome,
Slag Hill, Mount
Brew
and Crucible Dome,
were formed during subglacial eruptions to develop tuya-like forms
with over-steepened, ice-contact margins. The primary volcanoes
in the southern segment are Mount Garibaldi
, Mount Price, and
Black
Tusk
. The oldest volcano, Black Tusk, is the
remnants of an extinct andesitic stratovolcano that formed during
two distant stages of volcanic activity, the first between 1.1 and
1.3 million years ago and the second between 0.17 and 0.21 million
years ago.
Mount Garibaldi, a fairly dissected
stratovolcano north of Vancouver
, was built by Peléan eruptions between 0.26 and
0.22 million years ago during the waning stages of the
last glacial, or "Wisconsinian",
period. Mount Price, a less significant
stratovolcano just north of Mount Garibaldi, formed during three
distinct periods of volcanic activity beginning at 1.2 million
years ago and culminating with the eruption of Clinker Peak
on its western flank 0.3 million years
ago. In addition to the large, central andesite-dacite
volcanoes, the southern portion of the Garibaldi Volcanic Belt
includes remnants of basalt and basaltic andesite lava flows and
pyroclastic rocks. These include
valley -filling lava flows interbedded with till containing wood
about 34,000 years old.
The
poorly studied Alert Bay
Volcanic Belt extends from Brooks Peninsula
on the northwestern coast of Vancouver Island to
Port
McNeill
on the northeastern coast of Vancouver
Island. It encompasses several separate remnants of late
Neogene volcanic piles and related intrusions ranging in
composition from basalt to rhyolite and in age from about eight
million years old in the west to about 3.5 million years old
elsewhere. Major element analyses of Alert Bay volcanic and
hypabyssal rocks suggest two different
basalt-andesite-dacite-rhyolite suites with divergent fractionation
trends. The first coincides with the typical calc-alkaline, Cascade
trend, whereas the other is more alkaline and more Fe-enriched
following a trend which straddles the calc-alkaline-tholeiite
boundary. The western end of the Alert Bay Volcanic Belt is now
about northeast of the Nootka Fault. However, at the time of its
formation the volcanic belt may have been coincident with the
subducted plate boundary. Also, the timing of volcanism corresponds
to shifts of plate motion and changes in the locus of volcanism
along the Pemberton and Garibaldi volcanic belts. This brief
interval of plate motion adjustment at about 3.5 million years
ago may have triggered the generation of basaltic magma along the
descending plate edge. Because the Alert Bay Volcanic Belt has not
been active for at least 3.5 million years, volcanism in the
Alert Bay Volcanic Belt is probably extinct.

Cliffs made of lava flows from former
extensive volcanic activity in the Chilcotin Group.
The
Chilcotin Group, a large igneous
province and volcanic plateau in south-central British Columbia,
consists of thin, flat-lying, poorly formed
columnar basalt lava flows that have formed
as a result of
partial melting in a
weak zone in the upper part of the Earth's
mantle within a
back-arc basin related to subduction of the
Juan de Fuca Plate. Chilcotin Group volcanism occurred in three
distant magmatic episodes, the first 16-14 million years ago, the
seconed 10-6 million years ago and the third 3-1 million years ago.
Anahim Peak
, a volcanic plug near
the eastern flank of the Rainbow Range, and other plugs penetrating
the Chilcotin Group are suggested to be vents for basalt
volcanism. These volcanic plugs form a northwest trend about
inland from the Pemberton and Garibaldi volcanic belts and exist
along the axis of the volcanic plateau. Silicic
tuff lying between Chilcotin basalt lava flows, likely
originated from
explosive
eruptions related to arc volcanism in the Garibaldi and
Pemberton belts just to the west and was preserved between
successive basaltic lava eruptions in the Chilcotin back-arc basin.
It is suggested by geoscientists the Chilcotin Group forms a
sequence of merged low-profile shield volcanoes erupted from
central vents.
British Columbia plume and rift complexes

Map of the Northern Cordilleran
Volcanic Province.
The
Northern
Cordilleran Volcanic Province of northwestern British Columbia,
also called the Stikine Volcanic Belt, is the most active volcanic
region in Canada.
It comprises a large number of small cinder
cones and associated lava plains, and three large, compositionally
diverse volcanoes, known as the Level Mountain Range, the Mount Edziza
volcanic complex
, and Hoodoo Mountain
. In the south the volcanic province is
somewhat narrow and crosses diagonally through the northwesterly
structural trend of the Coast Mountains.
Farther north it is
less clearly defined, forming a large arch that swings westward
through central Yukon
.
Volcanoes within the British Columbia portion of the Northern
Cordilleran Volcanic Province are disposed along short, northerly
trending en-echelon segments which, in the British Columbia portion
of the volcanic province, are unmistakably involved with
north-trending rift structures including synvolcanic grabens and
half-grabens similar to the
East
African Rift, which extends from the
Afar Triple Junction southward across
eastern Africa.
The Northern Cordilleran rift system formed
as a result of the North American continent being stretched by
extensional forces as the Pacific
Plate slides northward along the Queen Charlotte Fault to the west, on
its way to the Aleutian
Trench
, which extends along the southern coastline of
Alaska and the adjacent waters of northeastern Siberia
off the coast of Kamchatka Peninsula
. As the continental crust stretches, the
near-surface rocks fracture along steeply dipping cracks parallel
to the rift known as
faults. Hot
basaltic magma rises along these fractures to create passive lava
eruptions. The compositions of lavas in the Northern Cordilleran
Volcanic Province are mantle-derived alkali olivine basalt, lesser
hawaiite and
basanite, which form the large shield volcanoes and
small cinder cones throughout the volcanic province. Many of them
contain inclusions of
lherzolite. The
large central volcanoes of the volcanic province consist largely of
trachyte,
pantellerite, and
comendite lavas. These lava compositions were
formed by fractionation of primary alkali basalt magma in crustal
reservoirs. A region of continental rifting, such as the Northern
Cordilleran Volcanic Province, would support the development of
high-level reservoirs of sufficient size and thermal capacity to
sustain prolonged fractionation.

Map of the Anahim Volcanic Belt
The
Anahim Volcanic Belt
extends from coastal British Columbia across the Coast Mountains
into the Interior Plateau. Its western end is defined by alkaline
intrusive and comagmatic volcanic rocks of the Bella Bella-King
Island complex, exposed in fjords and islands of the western Coast
Mountains.
The central portion of the Anahim Volcanic
Belt contains three complex shield volcanoes, known as the Rainbow
, Ilgachuz
, and Itcha
ranges. These fairly dissected shield volcanoes lie on the
northern end of the Chilcotin Group lava plateau and distal lava
flows at the margins of the shield volcanoes merge imperceptibly
with flat-lying lava flows comprising the Chilcotin Group lava
plateau. Unlike the Chilcotin Group basalt, which is not associated
with any felsic derivatives, the volcanoes of the central Anahim
Volcanic Belt are markedly bimodal, comprising a mixed assemblage
of basalt and peralkaline silicic rocks. While volcanoes of the
Anahim Volcanic Belt appear to merge laterally with the Chilcotin
Group lavas, the particular nature and connection between the
Anahim Volcanic Belt and the Chilcotin Group is unknown.
However,
volcanoes within the Anahim Volcanic Belt usually become younger
from coastal British Columbia to near the small city of Quesnel
further east, indicating these volcanoes may
have formed as a result of the North American Plate passing over a
possible mantle plume known as the Anahim
hotspot, whereas the Chilcotin Group is related to back-arc
basin volcanism. Nazko
Cone
, a cluster of basaltic cinder cones in the Nazko
area west of Quesnel forms the youngest and most
easterly part of the Anahim Volcanic Belt with dates of
7,200 years.

Pillow lavas and breccia overlain with
slabby pieces of sulfide formed from hydrothermal venting on the
east side of the Southern Explorer Ridge.
The
Explorer Ridge, an underwater mountain range lying west of
Vancouver
Island
on the Coast of British Columbia, consists of a
north-south trending rift zone. It contains one major
segment known as the Southern Explorer Ridge, along with other
smaller segments, such as the Northern Explorer Ridge. With a depth
of , the Southern Explorer Ridge is relatively shallow in
comparison with most other rift zones of the northeast Pacific
Ocean, indicating there has been considerable volcanic activity
along this part of the Explorer Ridge in the past 100,000 years.
Magic Mountain,
a large
hydrothermal vent area on
the Southern Explorer Ridge, is a scene of this volcanic activity.
Unlike most hydrothermal systems found in the Pacific Ocean, the
Magic Mountain site is situated outside the primary rift zone. The
source for the hydrothermal fluid that fuels Magic Mountain
probably rises along fracture systems associated with a recent
episode of rifting that, in turn, followed a massive outpouring of
lava. In contrast, the Northern Explorer Ridge has evolved into a
complex compound structure consisting of several rift basins
bounded by half-
graben and arcuate shaped
faults with a superimposed pattern of rhombohedral grabens and
horsts.

This vigorously venting black smoker
of the Main Endeavour hydrothermal field, called Sully, emits jets
of particle-laden fluids that create the black smoke.
The Endeavour Segment, an active rift zone of the larger
Juan de Fuca Ridge on the British
Columbia Coast, contains a group of active
black smokers called the
Endeavour Hydrothermal Vents,
located southwest of Vancouver Island. This group of hydrothermal
vents lies below sea level and consists of five hydrothermal
fields, known as
Sasquatch,
Saily Dawg,
High
Rise,
Mothra, and
Main Endeavour. Like
typical hydrothermal vents, the Endeavour Hydrothermal Vents form
when cold seawater seeps into cracks and crevices in the Endeavour
Segment where it becomes heated by magma that lies beneath the
seafloor. As the water is heated, it rises and seeks a path back
out into the Pacific Ocean through openings in the Endeavour
Segment, forming hydrothermal vents. These hydrothermal vents
release fluids with temperatures of over 300 °
C and have been a focus of research by Canadian and
international scientists. The manned
United States Navy deep-ocean research
submersible DSV
Alvin and the
remotely operated
underwater vehicle Jason have done
work at the Endeavour Hydrothermal Vents. Joint Canada-United
States studies have made use of the Canadian Remotely Operated
Platform for Ocean Sciences.
Fisheries and Oceans Canada has
conducted extensive acoustic and mooredinstrument programs at the
Endeavour Hydrothermal Vents since 1985.
Northern Canada

Map of the 1,267 million year old
Mackenzie dike swarm (black lines).
Dots indicate areas where flow direction was determined.
Red arcuate line indicates boundary between vertical flow and
horizontal flow.
Vast
volumes of basaltic lava covered Northern Canada in the form of a
flood basalt event 1,267 million
years ago that engulfed the landscape near the Coppermine
River
southwest of Coronation Gulf
in the Canadian Arctic. This volcanic
activity built an extensive
lava
plateau and
large igneous
province with an area of representing a volume of lavas of at
least .
With an area of and a volume of at least ,
it is larger than the Columbia River Basalt Group in
the United
States
and comparable in size to the Deccan Traps
in west-central India
, making it
one of the largest flood basalt events ever to appear on the North
American continent, as well as on Earth. This massive eruptive
event was associated with the Mackenzie magmatic event, that
included the coeval, layered, mafic-ultramafic Muskox
intrusion
and the enormous Mackenzie dike swarm that diverges from
the Coppermine River flood
basalts. The maximum thickness of the flood basalts are
and consist of 150 lava flows, each thick. These flood basalt lava
flows were erupted during a single event that lasted less than five
million years. Analysis of the chemical composition of the lavas
gives important clues about the origin and dynamics of the flood
basalt volcanism. The lowermost lavas were produced by melting in
the garnet stability field below the surface at a depth of more
than in a
mantle plume environment
beneath the North American
lithosphere.
As the mantle plume intruded rocks of the Canadian Shield, it
created an upwelling zone of molten rock known as the
Mackenzie hotspot. Upper lavas were partly
contaminated with crustal rocks as magmas from the mantle plume
passed through the lower and upper crust.
During
the Early Jurassic period
196 million years ago, the New
England or Great Meteor hotspot existed in the Rankin
Inlet
area of southern Nunavut along the northwestern
coast of Hudson
Bay
, producing kimberlite magmas. This marks the first
appearance of the New England hotspot, as well as the oldest
kimberlite eruption throughout the New England or Great Meteor hotspot
track, which extends southeastwards across Canada and enters
the northern Atlantic
Ocean
where the New England hotspot is presently
located.
The
Sverdrup Basin
Magmatic Province of northern Nunavut forms a large igneous
province 95 to 92 million years old in the Canadian
Arctic.
Part of the larger High Arctic Large Igneous
Province, it consists of two volcanic formations called the
Ellesmere Island
Volcanics and Strand Fiord Formation
. In the Strand Fiord Formation, flood
basalt lavas reach a thickness of at least .
Flood basalts of the
Sverdrup Basin Magmatic Province are similar to terrestrial flood
basalts associated with breakup of continents, indicating the
Sverdrup Basin Magmatic Province formed as a result of rifting of
the Arctic
Ocean
and when the large underwater Alpha Ridge was still geologically
active.
Widespread basalt volcanism occurred between
60.9 and 61.3 million years ago in the northern Labrador Sea
, Davis
Strait
and in southern Baffin Bay
on the eastern coast of Nunavut during the Paleocene period when North America and Greenland
were being separated from tectonic movements. This resulted
from
seafloor spreading where new
ocean seafloor was being created from
rising magma. Scientific studies have indicated nearly 80% of the
magma was erupted in one million years or less. The source for this
volcanic activity was the
Iceland
plume along with its surface expression, the
Iceland hotspot. This volcanic activity
formed part of a large igneous province that is presently sunken
beneath the northern Labrador Sea. Another period of volcanic
activity began in the same region about 55 million years ago
during the Eocene period when the north-south trending
Mid-Atlantic Ridge began to form under
the northern Atlantic Ocean east of Greenland. The cause of this
volcanism might be related to
partial
melting from movement of a
transform
fault system extending from Labrador Sea to the south and
Baffin Bay to the north. Although the region was carried away from
the Iceland plume by going plate motion over millions of years, the
source of the partial melting for the final period of volcanic
activity may have been remnants of still anomalously hot Iceland
plume magma which were left stranded beneath the North American
lithosphere in the Paleocene period. Most
diatremes in the Northwest Territories were formed
by volcanic eruptions between 45 and 75 million years ago
during the
Eocene and
Late Cretaceous periods.
More recent volcanic activity has created a northwest trending line
of volcanic rocks called the
Wrangell Volcanic Belt.
This volcanic belt lies largely in the U.S. state of Alaska
, but extends
across the Alaska-Yukon border into southwestern Yukon where it
contains scattered remnants of subaerial lavas and pyroclastic
rocks which are preserved along the entire eastern fringe of the
ice covered Saint
Elias Mountains
. The Wrangell Volcanic Belt formed as a
result of arc volcanism related to subduction of the
Pacific Plate under the northern portion of
the North American Plate. Over large areas extrusive rocks lie in
flat undisturbed piles on a Tertiary surface of moderate relief.
Locally, however, strata of the same age have been affected by a
late pulse of tectonism, during which they were faulted, contorted
into tight symmetrical folds, or overridden by pre-Tertiary
basement rocks along southwesterly dipping thrust faults.
Considerable recent uplift, accompanied by rapid erosion, has
reduced once vast areas of upper Tertiary volcanic rocks to small
isolated remnants.
Although no eruptions have occurred in the
Yukon portion of the Wrangell Belt for the past five million years,
two large (VEI-6)
explosive eruptions from Mount Churchill
west of the Alaska-Yukon border, created the
White River Ash deposit. This
volcanic ash deposit is estimated 1,890 and 1,250 years
old, covering more than of northwestern Canada and adjacent eastern
Alaska. Unproven legends from
indigenous people in the
area indicate the final eruption from Mount Churchill
1,250 years ago disrupted food supplies and forced them to
move further south.
The Yukon portion of the northwest trending
Northern Cordilleran
Volcanic Province includes the youngest volcanoes in Northern
Canada.
The Fort Selkirk Volcanic Field
in central Yukon consists of valley-filling basalt
lava flows and cinder cones. Ne Ch'e
Ddhawa, a cinder cone to the connection of the Yukon
and Pelly
rivers
formed between 0.8 and one million years ago when this area lied
beneath the vast Cordilleran Ice
Sheet. The youngest volcano, Volcano
Mountain
just north of the junction of the Yukon and Pelly
rivers, formed in past 10,000 years (Holocene), producing lava
flows that remain unvegetated and appear to be only a few hundred
years old. However, dating of sediments in a lake impounded
by the lava flows indicated that the youngest lava flows could not
be younger than mid-Holocene and could be early Holocene or older.
Therefore the most recent activity in the Fort Selkirk volcanic
field is unknown. The lava flows from Volcano Mountain are unusual
because they originate much deeper in the Earth's
mantle than the more common basaltic lava
flows found throughout the Yukon and are very uncommon in the
geological record. This lava, known as
olivine nephelinite, is
also unusual because it contains small, angular to rounded
fragments of rock called
nodules.
Mineralogy
Greenstone belts
The Archean age
greenstone belts
throughout Canada are important for estimating Canada's
mineral potential. Greenstone belts containing
mineralogy are related to volcanic
activity. Consequently geologists study greenstone belts to
understand the volcanoes and the environment in which they erupted,
and to provide a working model for mineral exploration.
The
1,904 to 1,864 million year old Flin Flon greenstone belt of
central Manitoba
and east-central Saskatchewan
is one of the largest Paleoproterozoic age volcanogenic massive
sulfide ore deposits in the world, containing 27 copper-zinc-(gold) deposits from which more than 183 million
tonnes of sulfide ore have been mined. The
2,575 million year old
Yellowknife greenstone belt in
the Northwest Territories is the host for world-class gold deposits
with total production of 15 million ounces of gold.
In the
Archean Hope Bay greenstone
belt of western Nunavut, three large gold deposits have been
known as Doris, Boston and Madrid, while the 2,677 million
year old Abitibi greenstone
belt of Ontario and Quebec is the seconed most prolific gold
producing area on Earth; the most prolific gold producing area is
the Witwatersrand
hill range in South
Africa.

Map of the 2,500 to 2,450 million year
old Matachewan dike swarm and the 2,500 million year old Mistassini
dike swarm of eastern Canada
Intrusions
Other magmatic formations, such as
dike
swarms and
sills, are known to
contain base and
precious metal
deposits. The 2,500 to 2,450 million year old
Matachewan dike swarm of eastern
Ontario hosts the 2,491 to 2,475 million year old long East Bull
Lake Intrusion and associated intrusions. The 2,217 to 2,210
million year old Ungava dike swarm magmatism was the source for the
Nipissing sills of Ontario and have been historically important for
copper,
silver, and
arsenic mineralization, and also have the
potential to contain
platinum group
metals.
A
third major event is the 1,885 to 1,865 million year old
magmatism of the Circum-Superior
Belt surrounding much of the Superior craton from the Labrador Trough in Labrador and northeastern
Quebec, though the Cape Smith Belt
in northern Quebec, the Belcher Islands
in southern Nunavut, the Fox River and Thompson belts in northern Manitoba, the
Winnipegosis komatiite
belt in central Manitoba, and on the southern side of the
Superior craton in the Animikie
Basin of northwestern Ontario. Included within the
Circum-Superior large igneous province are major nickel deposits of
the Thompson and Raglan belts, which were likely derived from more
than one magma source.
The major 1,267 million year old
Mackenzie dike swarm magmatism in the western part of the Canadian
Shield is the host for the highly prospected Muskox
intrusion
. Another significant event was the magmatism
that formed the 723 million year old
Franklin dike swarm of Northern Canada
and has been heavily mined for nickel, copper, and platinum group
metals. The 230 million year old accreted
oceanic plateau,
Wrangellia in British Columbia and Yukon, has
also been searched for nickel, copper, and platinum group
metals.
Diatremes

Diavik Diamond Mine in the Northwest
Territories consists of three diatremes
The kimberlite
diatremes or pipes across
Canada have also been an important economically because kimberlite
magmas are the world's main source of gem-quality
diamonds. Kimberlite diatremes or pipes form when
kimberlite magmas rise considerably from depths as great as . As
the kimberlite magmas reach a depth of at least , the kimberlite
magma explodes violently through the Earth's crust, carrying
fragments of rock that it has collected along the way and, in the
right conditions, possibly diamonds to the surface.
The Eocene (ca. 55-50 Ma) age diatremes of the Lac de Gras kimberlite field in
the central Slave craton of the
Northwest Territories support two world-class diamond mines called
Ekati
and Diavik
. Ekati, Canada's first diamond mine, has
produced of diamonds out of six
open
pits between 1998 and 2008, while Diavik to the southeast has
produced 35.4 million carats of diamonds since its foundation in
2003. The diamondiferous
Drybones Bay kimberlite pipe is
the largest diatreme discovered in the Northwest Territories,
measuring . Diamondiferous diatremes throughout the Northwest
Territories and Alberta have the potential to make Canada one of
the world's major producers of gem-quality diamonds.
Recent activity
Canada continues to be volcanically active, but the dispersed
population has witnessed few eruptions due to the remoteness of the
volcanoes and their low level of activity. The span of recorded and
witnessed volcanic activity in Canada differs from region to region
and at least two eruptions have been witnessed by people. Part of
the
Pacific Ring of Fire, more
than 200 potentially active volcanoes exist throughout Canada,
49 of which have erupted in the past 10,000 years
(
Holocene). This is very recent in
geological terms, suggesting volcanoes in Canada have ongoing
activity.
Ongoing scientific studies have indicated
there have been earthquakes associated with at least ten Canadian
volcanoes, including: Mount Garibaldi
, Hoodoo
Mountain
, Castle
Rock
, Mount
Cayley
, The Volcano
, Crow
Lagoon
, Silverthrone Caldera
, Mount
Meager
, the Wells
Gray-Clearwater volcanic field
, and the Mount Edziza volcanic complex
.

Keyhole Falls - all that grey is ash
from the last time Mount Meager erupted 2,350 years ago
Mount
Meager in the Garibaldi Volcanic Belt of southwestern British
Columbia was the source for a massive (VEI-5) Plinian eruption 2,350 years ago similar in
character to the 1980 eruption of Mount St.
Helens
in the U.S. state of Washington
. The eruption originated from a vent on the
northeast flank of Plinth
Peak
, the highest and one of four overlapping
stratovolcanoes which together form the Mount Meager massif.
This activity produced a diverse sequence of volcanic deposits,
well exposed in
bluffs along the long
Lillooet River, which are grouped as part of
the
Pebble Creek Formation.
The explosive power associated with this Plinian eruption sent an
ash column estimated to have risen
at least above Meager, indicating it entered
the second major layer of the Earth's
atmosphere. As prevailing winds sent ash and dust as far as to
the east, it created the large
Bridge
River Ash deposit, extending from Mount Meager to central
Alberta.
Pyroclastic flows
travelled downstream from the vent and buried trees along Meager's
forested slopes, which were burned in place. An unusual, thick
apron of welded vitrophyric breccia may represent the explosive
collapse of a former
lava dome which
deposited ash several meters in thickness near the vent area. This
collapse blocked the Lillooet River to a height of at least ,
forming a lake. The lake reached a maximum elevation of and thus
was at least deep.
The pyroclastic deposts blocking the
Lillooet River eventually eroded from water activity, causing a
massive outburst flood that sent small house-sized boulders down
the Lillooet River valley, and formed high Keyhole Falls
. The final phase of activity produced a long
glassy dacite lava flow that varies from thick. This is the largest
known explosive eruption in Canada in the past 10,000 years. Two
clusters of
hot springs are found at
Mount Meager, suggesting magmatic heat is still present and
volcanic activity continues.

South side of Cocoa Crater
The
massive Mount Edziza volcanic complex in the Northern Cordilleran
Volcanic Province of northern British Columbia has had more than 20
eruptions throughout the past 10,000 years (Holocene),
including Mess Lake Cone, Kana Cone, Cinder
Cliff, Icefall Cone, Ridge Cone, Williams Cone
, Walkout Creek
Cone, Moraine Cone, Sidas Cone
, Sleet Cone, Storm Cone, Triplex
Cone, Twin Cone, Cache Hill, Camp Hill, Cocoa Crater
, Coffee
Crater
, Nahta
Cone
, Tennena Cone, The Saucer, and the well-preserved Eve Cone
. Active or recently active hot springs are
found in several areas along the western flank of Edziza's lava
plateau, including Elwyn springs (36 °C), Taweh
springs (46 °C), and inactive springs near Mess Lake
. All three hydrothermal areas are near the
youngest lava fields on the lava plateau and are probably
associated with the most recent volcanic activity at the Mount
Edziza volcanic complex. An undated
pumice
deposit exists throughout the complex estimated to be younger than
500 years old.

Kostal Cone in the Wells
Gray-Clearwater volcanic field
Kostal Cone
in the Wells Gray-Clearwater volcanic field of
east-central British Columbia is a cinder cone responsible for
basaltic lava flows comprising a lava bed, damming the southern end
of McDougall
Lake
. There has been activity at this site as
recently as 7,600 years ago at Dragon Cone
, though more likely less than 1,000 years
ago. Kostal Cone is too young for the
potassium-argon dating technique
(usable on specimens over 100,000 years old), and no charred
organic material for
radiocarbon
dating has been found. However, the uneroded structure of the
cone with the existence of trees on its flanks and summit have made
it an area for
dendrochronology
studies, which reveals the growth of tree-ring patterns. Tree-ring
dating has revealed an age of about 400 years for Kostal Cone,
indicating it formed around 1500. This makes Kostal Cone the
youngest volcano in the Wells Gray-Clearwater volcanic field and
thus one of the youngest in Canada.

Nass valley lava beds erupted from
Tseax Cone in 1750 or 1775
Tseax Cone
, a young cinder cone at the southernmost end of the
Northern Cordilleran Volcanic Province, was the source for a major
basalt lava flow eruption around the years 1750 and 1775 that
travelled into the Tseax
River
, damming it and forming Lava
Lake. The lava flow subsequently travelled north to the
Nass River, where it filled the flat
valley floor for an additional , making the entire lava flow long.
Native legends from
Nisga'a people in the
area tell of a prolonged period of disruption by the volcano,
including the destruction of two Nisga'a villages known as
Lax Ksiluux and Wii Lax
K'abit. Nisga'a people dug pits for shelter but at least 2,000
Nisga'a people were killed due to
volcanic
gases and poisonous smoke (most likely
carbon dioxide). This is Canada's worst known
geophysical disaster. It is the only eruption in Canada for which
legends of
First Nations people have
been proven true.
As of 1993, the Tseax Cone quietly rests in
Nisga'a Memorial Lava Beds Provincial
Park
.

The eruption report in the Atlin area
of northwestern British Columbia, Canada (formerly in Alaska,
United States) by The New York Times on December 1, 1898
An
eruption was reported by placer miners
on November 8, 1898 in the Atlin Volcanic Field
of the Northern Cordilleran Volcanic Province
adjacent to Ruby
Mountain
volcano
south of Gladys Lake when volcanic ash was said to be falling for
many days. During the eruption the adjacent placer miners
were able to work at nights due to incandescent glow from the
eruption. A news report published on December 1, 1898 by the
American newspaper publisher
The New
York Times stated:
Kinslee and T. P.
James, Denver mining men who with Col. Hughes of Rossland have
just returned from Alaska, report that a volcano is in active
eruption about fifty miles from Atlin City. No name has
yet been given to the volcano, but the officials of Atlin are
preparing for a trip of inspection and will christen it.
It is said to be the second in a string of four mountains lying
fifty miles due south of Lake Gladys, all of which are more than
1,400 feet high. In 1898 the Atlin
area was in dispute with the Alaska-British Columbia
boundary, leading American news broadcasters stating the Atlin
area was in Alaska rather than in northwestern British
Columbia. This Alaska-British Columbia boundary dispute was
eventually resolved by arbitration in 1903 and no evidence for the
1898 eruption has been found, leading researchers to speculate
about the eruption and report it as uncertain.

Recently erupted pahoehoe lava flow at
the Blue River
The
Volcano
at the southern end of the Northern Cordilleran
Volcanic Province just north of the Alaska-British Columbia
boundary is probably the youngest in Canada. It is a poorly
built cinder cone made of loose volcanic ash,
lapilli-sized
tephra and
volcanic bombs.
Lying above a remote
mountain ridge in the Boundary
Ranges of the Coast Mountains, it is responsible for lava flow
eruptions in 1904 and older that traveled south through river
valleys where they crossed the border into the U.S. state of Alaska
and dammed the Blue River, a short tributary of the Unuk River
. In doing so it formed several small lakes.
This eruption had a massive effect on fish, plant and animal
inhabitants of the valley, but there is no record of its impact on
people, most likely because people were not in the remote area. The
entire length of the lava flows are at least and still contain the
original lava features from when they were erupted, including
pressure ridges and lava
channels. However, sections of the lava flows have collapsed into
underlying
lava tubes to form cavities.
Tephra and
scoria from The Volcano covers
adjacent mountain ridges and even through it is very young, it has
been reduced by erosion from alpine glacial ice found in the
heavily glaciated Coast Mountains. The estimated volume of lava and
ash from The Volcano is .

Map of the Nazko earthquake swarm in
2007
A series
of earthquakes of less than magnitude 3.0 were recorded by
seismographs in the Baezaeko River region west of Nazko Cone
in the Anahim Volcanic Belt on October 9,
2007. The cause of these earthquakes was magma intruding
into rock below the surface. Since then more than 1,000 small
earthquakes have been recorded. Because of the small size of the
earthquake swarms,
Natural Resources Canada has added
more seismographs in the region for better location and depth
accuracy. However, the size and number of the 2007 earthquake
swarms indicate there is currently no threat of an eruption. Before
magma could erupt in the area adjacent to Nazko Cone, it is
expected the size and number of the earthquakes would rise
considerably, presaging an eruption.
Mitigation and vulnerability

Map of young volcanoes in Northern and
Western Canada and adjacent regions
In Canada, even though volcanoes pose significant threats to local
communities and any sizable eruption would affect Canada's economy,
the work of understanding the frequency and eruption
characteristics at volcanoes in Canada is a slow process. This is
because most of Canada's dormant and potentially active volcanoes
are located in isolated jagged regions, very few scientists study
Canadian volcanoes and the provision of money in the Canadian
government is limited. Because of these issues, scientists studying
Canada's volcanoes have a basic understanding of Canada's volcanic
heritage and how it might impact people in the future.
Volcanologists are aware that certain areas in Canada have higher
levels of volcanic activity than others and how eruptions in these
areas might affect people and the environment they live in. When a
volcano is showing evidence of volcanic activity, quick action will
be required to better understand the process. The lowest
possibility for an eruption in Canada per year is approximately
1/200; for a passive lava eruption the possibility is about 1/220,
and for a major explosive eruption it is about 1/3333. Even though
volcanoes do not seem to be part of the everyday reality of
Canadians, recurrent earthquakes and the formation of large
mountain ranges in the
Pacific Northwest indicate this part of
Canada is still geologically active. The possibility of an
eruption, even a large explosive one, cannot be ruled out. Quiet as
they currently seem, volcanoes in Northern and Western Canada are
part of the
Pacific Ring of
Fire. Along with volcanoes associated with recent earthquake
activity, a scenario of an eruption at Mount Cayley in southwestern
British Columbia illustrates how Western Canada is in danger to a
volcanic eruption, which has not erupted for at least
310,000 years. This impact is becoming even more likely as
population in the Pacific Northwest increases and development
spreads. The scenario is based on former eruptions in the
north-south trending Garibaldi Volcanic Belt and includes both
explosive and passive eruptions. Its effect is mostly due to the
attention of defenseless public services in canyons. However, the
threat from volcanoes outside of Canada seems much greater than the
threat from volcanoes within Canada because of the lack of
monitoring data at Canadian volcanoes and the age of most volcanoes
in Canada is poorly known.
But for some, their minimal degree of
erosion indicates they formed much less than 10,000 years ago,
including the Milbanke Sound Group
on Price Island
, Dufferin Island,
Swindle Island, Lake Island, and Lady Douglas Island in the Milbanke
Sound
area of coastal British Columbia.
However,
it is known volcanoes in the U.S. states of Alaska, Washington
, Oregon
and California
have been more active in historic times than those
within Canada. Therefore volcanoes in the United States are
monitored with caution and attention by the
United States Geological
Survey.
Growing awareness of volcanism, especially the threat from
volcanoes in the United States, have lead to a number of changes in
the way Canadians are dealing with volcanic hazards.
For example, The Barrier, an unstable lava dam retaining the Garibaldi
Lake
system of southwestern British Columbia, has in the
past unleashed several debris flows,
most recently in 1855–1856. This led to the evacuation of the small
resort village of Garibaldi
nearby and the relocation of residents to new
recreational subdivisions away from the hazard zone.
Should
The Barrier completely collapse, Garibaldi Lake would be entirely
released and downstream damage in the Cheakamus and Squamish rivers would be considerable,
including major damage to the town of Squamish
and possibly an impact-wave on the waters of
Howe
Sound
that would reach Vancouver Island
. The
Interagency
Volcanic Event Notification Plan, Canada's volcanic emergency
notification program, was established to outline the notification
procedure of some of the main agencies that would be involved in
response to a volcanic eruption in Canada, an eruption close to
Canada's borders, or an eruption significant enough to have an
effect on Canada and its people. It focuses primarily on aviation
safety because jet aircraft can quickly enter areas of volcanic
ash. The program notifies all impacted agencies that have to deal
with volcanic events. Aircraft are rerouted away from hazardous ash
and people on the ground are notified of potential ash fall.
Monitoring
Currently no volcanoes in Canada are monitored closely enough by
the
Geological Survey of
Canada to ascertain how active their
magma chambers are. An existing network of
seismographs has been established to
monitor tectonic earthquakes and is too far away to provide a good
indication of what is happening beneath them. It may sense an
increase in activity if a volcano becomes very restless, but this
may only provide a warning for a large eruption. It might detect
activity only once a volcano has started erupting.
See also
References
- DOI:10.1007/BF02600430
- [1]
- [2]
- [3]
- [4]
- [5]
- [6]
- [7]
- [8]
- [9]
- [10]
- [11]
- [12]
- [13]
External links