Assigning dates to thin gneissic veins in high-grade metamorphic terranes: A cautionary tale from Akilia, southwest Greenland


Autoria(s): Whitehouse, MJ; Kamber, BS
Data(s)

01/01/2005

Resumo

A granodiorite from Akilia, southwest Greenland, previously suggested to date putative life-bearing rocks to greater than or equal to3.84 Ga, is re-investigated using whole-rock major and trace-element geochemistry, and detailed cathodoluminescence image-guided secondary ion mass spectrometer analyses of zircon U-Th-Pb and rare earth elements. Complex zircon internal structure reveals three episodes of zircon growth and/or recrystallization dated to c. 3.84 Ga, 3.62 Ga and 2.71 Ga. Rare earth element abundances imply a significant role for garnet in zircon generation at 3.62 Ga and 2.71 Ga. The 3.62 Ga event is interpreted as partial melting of a c. 3.84 Ga grey gneiss precursor at granulite facies with residual garnet. Migration of this 3.62 Ga magma (or melt-crystal mush) away from the melt source places a maximum age limit on any intrusive relationship. These early Archaean relationships have been complicated further by isotopic reworking in the 2.71 Ga event, which could have included a further episode of partial melting. This study highlights a general problem associated with dating thin gneissic veins in polyphase metamorphic terranes, where field relationships may be ambiguous and zircon inheritance can be expected.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:78168

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Oxford University Press

Palavras-Chave #Geochemistry & Geophysics #Archaean #Geochronology #Greenland #Secondary Ion Mass Spectrometry #Zircon #Southern West Greenland #Early Archean Rocks #Combined Ion-microprobe #Pb Zircon Data #Granulite Facies Transition #Rare-earth-elements #Trace-element #Continental-crust #Age Significance #Northwest Scotland #C1 #260301 Geochronology and Isotope Geochemistry #780104 Earth sciences
Tipo

Journal Article