Representative analyses of pre-tectonic metabasic rocks and metapelitic gneiss from Sverdrupfjella, East Antarctica

Extensive high-grade polydeformed metamorphic provinces surrounding Archaean cratonic nuclei in the East Antarctic Shield record two tectono-thermal episodes in late Mesoproterozoic and late Neoproterozoic-Cambrian times. In Western Dronning Maud Land, the high-grade Mesoproterozoic Maud Belt is juxtaposed against the Archaean Grunehogna Province and has traditionally been interpreted as a Grenvillian mobile belt that was thermally overprinted during the Early Palaeozoic. Integration of new U-Pb sensitive high-resolution ion microprobe and conventional single zircon and monazite age data, and Ar-Ar data on hornblende and biotite, with thermobarometric calculations on rocks from the H.U. Sverdrupfjella, northern Maud Belt, resulted in a more complex P-T-t evolution than previously assumed. A c. 540 Ma monazite, hosted by an upper ampibolite-facies mineral assemblage defining a regionally dominant top-to-NW shear fabric, provides strong evidence for the penetrative deformation in the area being of Pan-African age and not of Grenvillian age as previously reported. Relics of an eclogite-facies garnet-omphacite assemblage within strain-protected mafic boudins indicate that the peak metamorphic conditions recorded by most rocks in the area (T = 687-758°C, P = 9·4-11·3 kbar) were attained subsequent to decompression from P > 12·9 kbar. By analogy with limited U-Pb single zircon age data and on circumstantial textural grounds, this earlier eclogite-facies metamorphism is ascribed to subduction and accretion around 565 Ma. Post-peak metamorphic K-metasomatism under amphibolite-facies conditions is ascribed to the intrusion of post-orogenic granite at c. 480 Ma. The recognition of extensive Pan-African tectonism in the Maud Belt casts doubts on previous Rodinia reconstructions, in which this belt takes a pivotal position between East Antarctica, the Kalahari Craton and Laurentia. Evidence of late Mesoproterozoic high-grade metamorphism during the formation of the Maud Belt exists in the form of c. 1035 Ma zircon overgrowths that are probably related to relics of granulite-facies metamorphism recorded from other parts of the Maud Belt. The polymetamorphic rocks are largely derived from a c. 1140 Ma volcanic arc and 1072 ± 10 Ma granite.

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Board, W S, Frimmel, Hartwig E, Armstrong, Robert A (2005). Dataset: Representative analyses of pre-tectonic metabasic rocks and metapelitic gneiss from Sverdrupfjella, East Antarctica. https://doi.org/10.1594/PANGAEA.847094

DOI retrieved: 2005

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Imported on November 30, 2024
Last update November 30, 2024
License CC-BY-3.0
Source https://doi.org/10.1594/PANGAEA.847094
Author Board, W S
Given Name W S
Family Name Board
More Authors
Frimmel, Hartwig E
Armstrong, Robert A
Source Creation 2005
Publication Year 2005
Resource Type application/zip - filename: Board_2005
Subject Areas
Name: Chemistry

Name: Lithosphere

Related Identifiers
Title: Pan-African tectonism in the western Maud Belt: P-T-t path for high-grade gneisses in the H.U. Sverdrupfjella, East Antarctica
Identifier: https://doi.org/10.1093/petrology/egh093
Type: DOI
Relation: IsSupplementTo
Year: 2005
Source: Journal of Petrology
Authors: Board W S , Frimmel Hartwig E , Armstrong Robert A .