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| The Duluth Complex |
The Duluth Complex is a large, composite mafic intrusion in northeastern Minnesota that extends about 240 km northeast from Duluth Minnesota to the Canadian border. The Duluth Complex lies within Precambrian shield rocks of the Superior Province which include Archaean mafic to felsic volcanic rocks, greywackes, granitic intrusives and older ortho- and paragneisses. The Duluth Complex was intruded beneath a similar age volcanic rocks during the formation of the Midcontinent Rift System which developed approximately 1.2 to 1.1 billion years ago. The fill associated with the active stages of rift development consists mainly of tholeiitic basalt that was erupted under subaerial conditions, together with petrologically related sills, dikes, and large layered intrusions that cooled beneath or within the cogenetic volcanic pile. The largest and most important of the layered intrusions is the Duluth Complex, a composite intrusion of troctolite and gabbro derived from periodic tapping of an evolving magma source. In the waning stages of rifting, the principal rock types deposited in the rift shifted gradually from magmatic to sedimentary; among the sedimentary sequences are those for which alluvial-fan, fluvial braid-plain, aeolian, and lacustrine depositional environments may be inferred. Associated gabbroic intrusion resulted in the composite, arcuate, NE-SW elongated, 450 x 100 km Duluth Complex, which formed from up to 40 separate sheet like and cone shaped sub-intrusions and covers an area of approximately 6500 square kilometers. 


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