Coldwell Complex

{{Short description|Landform in Thunder Bay district, Ontario}}

The Coldwell Complex is a large circular gabbro and syenite intrusion within the Earth's crust. Located on the North Shore of Lake Superior in Ontario, Canada, it is the largest alkaline intrusion in North America with a diameter of {{convert|25|km|mi|0|abbr=on}}.[http://mgmudrey.brinkster.net/Compressed/ILSG%2023rd%20Meeting%20Coldwell%20OCR.CV.pdf Twenty Third Annual Meeting Thunder Bay Ontario: Institute on Lake Superior Geology] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110515163858/http://mgmudrey.brinkster.net/Compressed/ILSG%2023rd%20Meeting%20Coldwell%20OCR.cv.pdf |date=2011-05-15 }}

Formation

The Coldwell Complex has its origins in the Midcontinent Rift System about 1,100 million years ago. It is an exposed magma chamber that formed beneath the surface causing surface swelling to occur. This swelling turned into an active volcano, erupting basaltic magma. 600 million years ago, the volcano walls became so large and heavy, they caved in on the volcano, acting as a cap. The magma then became trapped in the magma chamber where it settled and cooled with other minerals causing the initial phases of the complex. Glacial erosion stripped away the top layers of the volcano. Today, the once-hot magma chamber is exposed to surface rock on the northern shore of Lake Superior.

See also

References

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Category:Volcanoes of Ontario

Category:Proterozoic volcanism

Category:Landforms of Thunder Bay District

Category:Igneous intrusions

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