123 resultados para GRANITOIDS
Resumo:
O depósito aurífero de Piaba tornou-se a primeira mina em operação no fragmento cratônico São Luís, noroeste do Maranhão. Seu ambiente geológico compreende rochas metavulcanossedimentares do Grupo Aurizona e granitoides da Suíte Tromaí, entre outras unidades menores, formadas em ambiente de arcos de ilhas entre 2240 e 2150 Ma, juntamente com outras unidades menores. A mineralização é caracterizada por uma trama stockwork de veios e vênulas de quartzo com seus halos de alteração (clorita + muscovita + carbonato + pirita + calcopirita e ouro) hospedada em um granodiorito granofírico fino (Granófiro Piaba) e em rocha subvulcânica andesítica do Grupo Aurizona. O corpo mineralizado é espacialmente limitado à zona de cisalhamento ENE-WSW rúptil-dúctil (Falha Piaba). Estudos petrográficos, microtermométricos e por espectroscopia microRaman no quartzo definiram inclusões aquo-carbônicas bifásicas e trifásicas, produzidas por aprisionamento heterogêneo durante separação de fases, e fluidos aquosos tardios. A solução mineralizadora corresponde a um fluido aquo-carbônico composto por CO2 (5 - 24 mol%, densidade de 0,96 - 0,99 g/cm3), H2O (74 - 93 mol%), N2 (< 1 mol%), CH4 (<1mol%) e 5,5 % em peso NaCl equivalente. O minério depositou a 267 - 302ºC e 1,25 - 2,08 kbar, correspondendo a profundidades de 4 a 7 km, em consonância com o regime estrutural. A composição e o intervalo de P-T do fluido mineralizador, combinados com o caráter redutor (log ƒO2 -31,3 a -34,3) e a sulfetação da rocha hospedeira, sugerem que o ouro foi transportado como um complexo sulfetado. O minério foi depositado em consequência da separação de fase, redução da atividade de enxofre e da ƒO2 pela interação fluido-rocha.
Resumo:
Os granodioritos Água Azul (GrdAA) e Água Limpa (GrdAL) afloram no extremo sul do Domínio Carajás como dois corpos alongados segundo o trend regional E-W, anteriormente inseridos no Complexo Xingu. O GrdAL é formado essencialmente por biotita-anfibólio granodioritos e muscovita-biotita granodioritos, além de anfibólio-biotita tonalitos subordinados; no GrdAA, epídoto-anfibólio-biotita granodioritos são dominantes, epídoto-anfibólio-biotita tonalitos e (anfibólio)-epídoto-biotita monzogranitos, subordinados. Essas rochas mostram assinaturas geoquímicas afins dos sanukitoides arqueanos. O estudo de suscetibilidade magnética (SM) mostrou valores relativamente baixos para o GrdAL (média de 17,54 × 10-4 SIv) e o GrdAA (média de 4,19 × 10-4 SIv). Os estudos dos minerais opacos mostram que a magnetita e a hematita são as fases comuns e que a ilmenita está ausente nessas rochas. O GrdAL contém titanita associada à magnetita, enquanto o GrdAA contém pirita, calcopirita e goethita. No GrdAL, a magnetita é mais abundante e desenvolvida que no GrdAA, justificando, assim, sua SM mais elevada. A martitização da magnetita e a oxidação dos sulfetos, gerando goethita, ocorreram a baixas temperaturas. A correlação positiva entre os valores de SM e os conteúdos modais de opacos, anfibólio, epídoto + allanita e quartzo + K-feldspato, assim como a correlação negativa de SM com biotita e máficos observadas nessas unidades, denunciam uma tendência no aumento de SM no sentido anfibólio tonalitos/anfibólio granodioritos à biotita granodioritos/biotita monzogranitos. Os dados geoquímicos corroboram esse comportamento, com correlação negativa entre os valores de SM e Fe2O3T, FeO e MgO, refletindo para as duas unidades uma tendência de aumento nos valores de SM paralelamente à diferenciação magmática. As afinidades geoquímicas e mineralógicas entre essas rochas e os sanukitoides do Domínio Rio Maria sugerem condições de fugacidade de oxigênio entre os tampões HM e FMQ para os granitoides estudados.
Resumo:
A região de Santana do Araguaia, foco deste trabalho, localiza-se no sudeste do Estado do Pará, que, por sua vez, fica no sudeste do Cráton Amazônico. Sob o ponto de vista tectônico, posiciona-se no Domínio Santana do Araguaia, interpretado como um terreno arqueano afetado pelo Ciclo Transamazônico. Um estudo petrográfico e geocronológico, com suporte de dados de campo, foi empreendido em granitoides da região com o intuito de desvendar a evolução desse domínio. Em termos modais, as rochas estudadas compõem-se de biotita monzogranito, biotita metagranodiorito, hornblenda-biotita granodiorito, hornblenda-biotita metatonalito e enderbito. Essas rochas apresentam-se não deformadas a moderadamente deformadas, com algumas particularidades: o biotita metagranodiorito apresenta foliação seguindo um trend E-W; o hornblenda-biotita metatonalito possui uma foliação seguindo a direção NW-SE, com mergulhos normalmente altos a subverticais; o biotita monzogranito é isotrópico e os litotipos hornblenda-biotita granodiorito e enderbito apresentam apenas uma leve orientação de seus cristais, perceptível principalmente em lâmina delgada. Esses litotipos foram analisados pelo método de evaporação de Pb de zircão, tendo sido obtidas as seguintes idades: biotita metagranodiorito, 3066 ± 3 Ma e 2829 ± 13 Ma, hornblenda-biotita metatonalito, 2852 ± 2 Ma; biotita monzogranito (ML-08), 2678 a 2342 Ma; hornblenda-biotita granodiorito, 1990 ± 7 Ma; e enderbito, 1988 ± 4 Ma. Os dados geocronológicos indicam que as rochas cristalizaram tanto no Arqueano quanto no Paleoproterozoico, contudo, não foram detectadas evidências que comprovem a ação do Ciclo Transamazônico na região.
Resumo:
As formações Sobreiro e Santa Rosa são resultado de intensas atividades vulcânicas paleoproterozoicas na região de São Félix do Xingu (PA), SE do Cráton Amazônico. A Formação Sobreiro é composta por rochas de fácies de fluxo de lava andesítica, com dacito e riodacito subordinados, além de rochas que compõem a fácies vulcanoclástica, caracterizadas por tufo, lapilli-tufo e brecha polimítica maciça. Essas rochas exibem fenocristais de clinopiroxênio, anfibólio e plagioclásio em uma matriz microlítica ou traquítica. O clinopiroxênio é classificado predominantemente como augita, com diopsídio subordinado, e apresenta caracterísiticas geoquímicas de minerais gerados em rochas de arco magmático. O anfibólio, representado pela magnesiohastingsita, foi formado sob condições oxidantes e apresenta texturas de desequilíbrio, como bordas de oxidação vinculadas à degaseificação por alívio de pressão. As rochas da Formação Santa Rosa foram extravasadas em grandes fissuras crustais de direção NE-SW, têm características de evolução polifásica e compõem uma fácies de fluxo de lava riolítica e riodacítica e uma fácies vulcanoclástica de ignimbritos, lapilli-tufos, tufos de cristais félsicos e brechas polimíticas maciças. Diques métricos e stocks de pórfiros graníticos e granitoides equigranulares completam essa suíte. Fenocristais de feldspato potássico, plagioclásio e quartzo dispersos em matriz de quartzo e feldspato potássico intercrescidos ocorrem nessas rochas. Por meio de análises químicas pontuais dos fenocristais em microssonda eletrônica, foram estimadas as condições de pressão e temperatura de sua formação, sendo que o clinopiroxênio das rochas intermediárias da Formação Sobreiro indica profundidade de formação variável entre 58 e 17,5 km (17,5 - 4,5 kbar), a temperaturas entre 1.294 e 1.082 ºC, enquanto o anfibólio cristalizou-se entre 28 e 15 km (7,8 - 4,1 kbar), o que sugere uma evolução polibárica. Assim, propõe-se um modelo de geração de magma basáltico hidratado com base na fusão parcial de cunha mantélica e no acúmulo na crosta inferior em uma zona quente, a partir da qual os magmas andesíticos e dacíticos são formados pela assimilação de crosta continental e cristalização fracionada.
Resumo:
O Trondhjemito Mogno, uma das mais expressivas associações TTG do Terreno Granito-Greenstone de Rio Maria (TGGRM), tida como representativa da segunda geração de TTGs daquele terreno, apresenta, em sua principal área de ocorrência, diferenças estruturais, petrográficas, geoquímicas e geocronológicas que levaram à sua separação em duas associações distintas. A designação de Trondhjemito Mogno foi mantida para a associação dominante, com padrão estrutural NW-SE a EW, distribuída nos domínios leste e oeste da área. A nova associação identificada na porção centro-oeste da área mapeada, com foliação dominante NE-SW a N-S foi denominada de Tonalito Mariazinha. Reduziu-se, assim, à área de ocorrência do Trondhjemito Mogno e definiu-se nova unidade estratigráfica na região. Dados geocronológicos inéditos revelam que o Trondhjemito Mogno e o Tonalito Mariazinha possuem idades distintas e não fazem parte da segunda geração de TTGs do TGGRM. As duas associações estudadas são constituídas por epidoto-biotita tonalitos e trondhjemitos, os quais pertencem ao grupo de TTG com alto Al2O3 e possuem características geoquímicas compatíveis com as dos típicos granitóides arqueanos da série trondhjemítica. Comparações com TTGs da região de Xinguara mostram que o Trondhjemito Mogno possui características geoquímicas transicionais entre o Complexo Tonalítico Caracol e o Trondhjemito Água Fria, enquanto que o Tonalito Mariazinha se assemelha com o Complexo Tonalítico Caracol. Os estudos sobre o Trondhjemito Mogno e granitóides arqueanos associados demonstram que as associações TTG do TGGRM são mais diversificadas do que era admitido e contribuíram significativamente para sua melhor compreensão, reduzindo expressivamente as ocorrências da segunda geração de TTGs naquele terreno e levando à identificação de nova associação TTG.
Resumo:
Na região do Gurupi, nordeste do Pará, Brasil, afloram corpos granitóides em janelas erosivas das coberturas fanerozóicas. Eles representam marcadores importantes da evolução geotectônica da área e neste trabalho são investigados a partir de estudos isotópicos Sm-Nd e datações 207Pb/206Pb em monocristais de zircão. A maioria dos corpos tem gênese relacionada aos processos geológicos que formaram grande parte desse segmento crustal, onde se insere o Cráton São Luis. Tais processos remontam a um ambiente de interação entre arcos de ilhas e núcleos arqueanos, durante o Paleoproterozóico (2,15 – 2,07Ga). Um corpo granitóide, de idade eo-cambriana, (549± 4Ma) foi formado durante a reativação tectônica que retrabalhou a borda sudoeste do cráton e que gerou o Cinturão de Cisalhamento Gurupi.
Resumo:
A Província Aurífera do Tapajós (PAT) está localizada na porção central do cráton Amazônico e é dominada por rochas graníticas e vulcânicas paleoproterozóicas intermediárias a félsicas em composição. A região de Vila Riozinho, situada na parte centro-leste da PAT e formada pelas localidades de Vila Riozinho, Moraes Almeida e Jardim do Ouro, engloba as principais unidades geológicas que caracterizam a PAT. Este trabalho apresenta novos dados petrográficos e geocronológicos de granitos pórfiros que ocorrem associados a rochas monzograníticas do corpo São Jorge Antigo e a ignimbritos e riolitos da Formação Moraes Almeida e leucogranitos da Suíte Intrusiva Maloquinha. Os dados geocronológicos revelaram, pelo menos, dois períodos distintos de geração de granitos pórfiros na região. O primeiro, associado ao magmatismo cálcico-alcalino de 1,98 Ga e o segundo, a rochas alcalinas de idades em torno de 1,88 Ga. Imagens de elétrons retro-espalhados e análises de EDS (Energy Dispersive Spectrometry) obtidas através de um microscópio eletrônico de varredura (MEV) mostraram que são freqüentes as ocorrências de partículas de ouro nos granitos pórfiros ora preenchendo cavidades em cristais de quartzo e plagioclásio, ora associadas a cristais de epidoto e álcali-feldspato. Tal fato sugere que esses granitos podem ter contribuído para a mineralização de ouro da região de Vila Riozinho e mostra a necessidade de estudos detalhados para elucidar a importância metalogenética dessas rochas na mineralização aurífera da região.
Resumo:
The towns of Castro Alves and Rafael Jambeiro, central-east of Bahia state, are located in the east of São Francisco Craton, in granulite terrains of Salvador-Curaçá Belt, formed in Paleoproterozoic. The region of study contains ortognaisses of Caraíba Complex, metamafic and metaultramafic rocks of São José do Jacuípe Suite, metasedimentary rocks of Tanque Novo-Ipirá Complex, granitoids, pegmatites and alkaline rocks. The study carried out regional and detailed geological mapping in addition to petrographical and geochemical characterization of six areas in the search for targets of feldspar and white diopside, minerals used in ceramic industry. The areas consist of granitic ortognaisses interspersed with lenses of mafic granulite rocks, calc-silicate rock, banded iron formations, paragnaisses, quartzites, and bodies of quartz-feldspar or feldspar pegmatites and alkaline rocks that fill discontinuities. The region of study contains four deformations phases, with a predominance of ductile structures. The foliation Sn has N30E to N70W direction, high angle of dip and is characterized by compositional banding of granoblastic and felsic bands interspersed with nematoblastic or lepidoblastic mafic bands. A mineral or stretching lineation Ln is associated with Sn and has trend of S55E to S72E. The rocks have been suffered a regional metamorphism with granulite facies peak and partial retrogression to greenschist facies. Geochemical studies indicate that the green coloring calc-silicate rocks have lower SiO2, MgO and higher Fe2O3 content compared with white calcssilicate rocks. The alkaline rocks of the studied area have higher Na2O, SiO2 and lower K2O, Fe2O3 content compared with others Paleoproterozoic alkaline rocks of Bahia state. The targets of diopside are associated with white calc-silicate rocks, while the targets of feldspar are associated with paragnaisses, pegmatites and alkaline rocks
Resumo:
We present field relationships, major and trace element geochemistry and U-Pb SHRIMP and ID-TIMS geochronology of the A-type Ordovician Quintas pluton located in the Ceara Central Domain of the Borborema Province, in northeastern Brazil. This pluton presents a concentric geometry and is composed mainly of syenogranite, monzogranite, quartz syenite to quartz monzodiorite, monzogabbro and diorite. Its geochemical characteristics [SiO2 (52-70%), Na2O/K2O (1.55-0.65), Fe2O3/MgO (2.2-7.3), metaluminous to sligthly alkaline affinity, post-collisional type in (Y + Nb) x Rb diagram, and A-type affinity (Ga > 22 ppm, Nb > 20 ppm, Zn > 60 ppm), REE fractioned pattern with negative Eu anomaly] are coherent with post-collisional A(2)-type granitoids. However, the emplacement of this pluton is to some extent temporally associated with the deposition of the first strata of the Parnaiba intracratonic basin, attesting also to a purely anorogenic character (A(1)-type granitoid). The emplacement of this pluton is preceded by one of the largest known orogenesis of the planet (Neoproterozoic Pan-African/Brasiliano) and, if it is classified as an A(2)-type granitoid, it provides interesting constraints about how long can last A(2)-type magmatic activity after a major collisional episode, arguably triggered by disturbance of the underlying mantle, a topic extensively debated in the geoscience community. (C) 2011 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
Resumo:
The Neoproterozoic post-collisional period in southern Brazil (650-580 Ma) is characterized by substantial volumes of magma emplaced along the active shear zones that compose the Southern Brazilian Shear Belt. The early-phase syntectonic magmatism (630-610 Ma) is represented by the porphyritic, high-K, metaluminous to peraluminous Quatro Ilhas Granitoids and the younger heterogranular, slightly peraluminous Mariscal Granite. Quatro II has Granitoids include three main petrographic varieties (muscovite-biotite granodiorite mbg; biotite monzogranite - bmz: and leucogranite - lcg) that, although sharing some significant geochemical characteristics, are not strictly comagmatic, as shown by chemical and Sr-Nd-Pb isotope data. The most primitive muscovite-biotite granodiorite was produced by contamination of more mafic melts (possibly with some mantle component) with peraluminous crustal melts; the biotite monzogranite, although more felsic, has higher Ca, MgO,TiO2 and Ba, and lower K2O, FeOt, Sr and Rb contents, possibly reflecting some mixing with coeval mafic magmas of tholeiitic affinity; the leucogranite may be derived from pure crustal melts. The Mariscal Granite is formed by two main granite types which occur intimately associated in the same pluton, one with higher K (5-6.5 wt.% K2O) high Rb and lower CaO, Na2O, Ba and Zr as compared to the other (3-5 wt.% of K2O). The two Mariscal Granite varieties have compositional correspondence with fine-grained granites (fgg) that occur as tabular bodies which intruded the Quatro Ilhas Granoitoids before they were fully crystallized, and are inferred to correspond to the Mariscal Granite feeders, an interpretation that is reinforced by similar U-Pb zircon crystallization ages. The initial evolution of the post-collisional magmatism, marked by the emplacement of the Quatro Ilhas Granitoids varieties, activated sources that produced mantle and crustal magmas whose emplacement was controlled both by flat-lying and transcurrent structures. The transition from thrust to transcurrent-related tectonics coincides with the increase in the proportion of crustal-derived melts. The transcurrent tectonics seems to have played an essential role in the generation of mantle-derived magmas and may have facilitated their interaction with crustal melts which seem to be to a large extent the products of reworking of orthogneiss protoliths. (C) 2012 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Resumo:
New geochronological and geochemical constraints on Precambrian sedimentary and volcanic successions exposed in the western part of the Central Domain of the Borborema Province, NE Brazil, indicate the presence of two distinct tectono-stratigraphic complexes: Riacho Gravata and Sao Caetano. Both complexes and associated orthogneisses are referred in the literature as the Cariris Velhos belt, having depositional, extrusive, or intrusive ages within the interval 985-913 Ma. The Riacho Gravata complex consists of bimodal (but mostly felsic) volcanic and volcanoclastic rocks, muscovite+/-graphite schists, quartzites, and marble with local occurrences of banded-iron-formation. The Sao Caetano complex mainly consists of metagreywackes, marbles, calc-silicate rocks, and rare meta-mafic rocks. Meta-mafic rocks from both complexes have geochemical signatures similar to those of continental flood basalts, with epsilon Nd (1.0 Ga) values ranging from -1.0 to -2.8. Felsic volcanic rocks from the Riacho Gravata complex show epsilon Nd (1.0 Ga) values ranging from -1.0 to -7.4 and geochemical signatures similar to A(2)-type granitoids. New SHRIMP U-Pb zircon data from felsic volcanic rocks within the Riacho Gravata complex yielded ages of 1091 +/- 13 Ma and 996 +/- 13 Ma. In contrast, meta-graywackes from the Sao Caetano complex show a maximum deposition age of ca. 806 Ma in the northern part and ca. 862 Ma in the southern part of the outcrop area. The orthogneisses show epsilon Nd (1.0 Ga) values ranging from 1.0 to -4.2 with U/Pb TIMS and SHRIMP ages ranging from 960 to 926 Ma and geochemical signatures of A(2)-type granitoids. The data reported in this paper suggest at least two periods of extension within the Central Domain of the Borborema Province, the first starts ca. 1091 Ma with magmatism and deposition, creating the Riacho Gravata basin and continued intrusion of A-type granites to 920 Ma. A second rift event, which reactivated old faults, generated a basin with a maximum deposition age of ca. 806 Ma. Furthermore, the oldest granitoids cutting these metasedimentary rocks have crystallization ages of ca. 600 Ma. This suggests that the second rift event could be early Brasiliano in age. The resulting Sao Caetano basin received detritus from a variety of sources, although detritus from the Riacho Gravata complex dominated. Deposition ages of the Riacho Gravata and the Sao Caetano complexes are coeval with deposits in other basins of the Borborema Province (Riacho do Tigre in the Central Domain; Macurure and Maranco in the Sergipano Belt of the Southern domain). The Macaubas Group from SE Brazil and its counterparts in Africa, the Zadanian and Mayumbian Groups, in the western edge of the Congo Craton are also coeval. Closure of the Riacho Gravata and Sao Caetano basins occurred during the Brasiliano convergence (705-600 Ma). During the last stage of convergence, ca. 612 Ma, pull-apart basins were created and filled; final basin closure took place 605-592 Ma, after deposition ceased. (C) 2011 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Resumo:
Low-pressure/high-temperature (LP/HT) metamorphic belts are characterised by rocks that experienced abnormal heat flow in shallow crustal levels (T > 600 °C; P < 4 kbar) resulting in anomalous geothermal gradients (60-150 °C/km). The abnormal amount of heat has been related to crustal underplating of mantle-derived basic magmas or to thermal perturbation linked to intrusion of large volumes of granitoids in the intermediate crust. In particular, in this latter context, magmatic or aqueous fluids are able to transport relevant amounts of heat by advection, thus favouring regional LP/HT metamorphism. However, the thermal perturbation consequent to heat released by cooling magmas is responsible also for contact metamorphic effects. A first problem is that time and space relationships between regional LP/HT metamorphism and contact metamorphism are usually unclear. A second problem is related to the high temperature conditions reached at different crustal levels. These, in some cases, can completely erase the previous metamorphic history. Notwithstanding this problem is very marked in lower crustal levels, petrologic and geochronologic studies usually concentrate in these attractive portions of the crust. However, only in the intermediate/upper-crustal levels of a LP/HT metamorphic belt the tectono-metamorphic events preceding the temperature peak, usually not preserved in the lower crustal portions, can be readily unravelled. The Hercynian Orogen of Western Europe is a well-documented example of a continental collision zone with widespread LP/HT metamorphism, intense crustal anatexis and granite magmatism. Owing to the exposure of a nearly continuous cross-section of the Hercynian continental crust, the Sila massif (northern Calabria) represents a favourable area to understand large-scale relationships between granitoids and LP/HT metamorphic rocks, and to discriminate regional LP/HT metamorphic events from contact metamorphic effects. Granulite-facies rocks of the lower crust and greenschist- to amphibolite-facies rocks of the intermediate-upper crust are separated by granitoids emplaced into the intermediate level during the late stages of the Hercynian orogeny. Up to now, advanced petrologic studies have been focused mostly in understanding P-T evolution of deeper crustal levels and magmatic bodies, whereas the metamorphic history of the shallower crustal levels is poorly constrained. The Hercynian upper crust exposed in Sila has been subdivided in two different metamorphic complexes by previous authors: the low- to very low-grade Bocchigliero complex and the greenschist- to amphibolite-facies Mandatoriccio complex. The latter contains favourable mineral assemblages in order to unravel the tectono-metamorphic evolution of the Hercynian upper crust. The Mandatoriccio complex consists mainly of metapelites, meta-arenites, acid metavolcanites and metabasites with rare intercalations of marbles and orthogneisses. Siliciclastic metasediments show a static porphyroblastic growth mainly of biotite, garnet, andalusite, staurolite and muscovite, whereas cordierite and fibrolite are less common. U-Pb ages and internal features of zircons suggest that the protoliths of the Mandatoriccio complex formed in a sedimentary basin filled by Cambrian to Silurian magmatic products as well as by siliciclastic sediments derived from older igneous and metamorphic rocks. In some localities, metamorphic rocks are injected by numerous aplite/pegmatite veins. Small granite bodies are also present and are always associated to spotted schists with large porphyroblasts. They occur along a NW-SE trending transcurrent cataclastic fault zone, which represents the tectonic contact between the Bocchigliero and the Mandatoriccio complexes. This cataclastic fault zone shows evidence of activity at least from middle-Miocene to Recent, indicating that brittle deformation post-dated the Hercynian orogeny. P-T pseudosections show that micaschists and paragneisses of the Mandatoriccio complex followed a clockwise P-T path characterised by four main prograde phases: thickening, peak-pressure condition, decompression and peak-temperature condition. During the thickening phase, garnet blastesis started up with spessartine-rich syntectonic core developed within micaschists and paragneisses. Coevally (340 ± 9.6 Ma), mafic sills and dykes injected the upper crustal volcaniclastic sedimentary sequence of the Mandatoriccio complex. After reaching the peak-pressure condition (≈4 kbar), the upper crust experienced a period of deformation quiescence marked by the static overgrowths of S2 by Almandine-rich-garnet rims and by porphyroblasts of biotite and staurolite. Probably, this metamorphic phase is related to isotherms relaxation after the thickening episode recorder by the Rb/Sr isotopic system (326 ± 6 Ma isochron age). The post-collisional period was mainly characterised by decompression with increasing temperature. This stage is documented by the andalusite+biotite coronas overgrown on staurolite porphyroblasts and represents a critical point of the metamorphic history, since metamorphic rocks begin to record a significant thermal perturbation. Peak-temperature conditions (≈620 °C) were reached at the end of this stage. They are well constrained by some reaction textures and mineral assemblages observed almost exclusively within paragneisses. The later appearance of fibrolitic sillimanite documents a small excursion of the P-T path across the And-Sil boundary due to the heating. Stephanian U-Pb ages of monazite crystals from the paragneiss, can be related to this heating phase. Similar monazite U-Pb ages from the micaschist combined with the lack of fibrolitic sillimanite suggest that, during the same thermal perturbation, micaschists recorded temperatures slightly lower than those reached by paragneisses. The metamorphic history ended with the crystallisation of cordierite mainly at the expense of andalusite. Consequently, the Ms+Bt+St+And+Sill+Crd mineral assemblage observed in the paragneisses is the result of a polyphasic evolution and is characterised by the metastable persistence of the staurolite in the stability fields of the cordierite. Geologic, geochronologic and petrographic data suggest that the thermal peak recorded by the intermediate/upper crust could be strictly connected with the emplacement of large amounts of granitoid magmas in the middle crust. Probably, the lithospheric extension in the relatively heated crust favoured ascent and emplacement of granitoids and further exhumation of metamorphic rocks. After a comparison among the tectono-metamorphic evolutions of the different Hercynian crustal levels exposed in Sila, it is concluded that the intermediate/upper crustal level offers the possibility to reconstruct a more detailed tectono-metamorphic history. The P-T paths proposed for the lower crustal levels probably underestimate the amount of the decompression. Apart from these considerations, the comparative analysis indicates that P-T paths at various crustal levels in the Sila cross section are well compatible with a unique geologic scenario, characterized by post-collisional extensional tectonics and magmas ascent.
Resumo:
Zusammenfassung:Mit Hilfe einer neuen Formel für die Minerale der Pyrochlor-Gruppe werden sämtliche Endglieder der Na-Ca-Mikrolithe und der Ba-haltigen Mikrolithe aus der Pegmatit-Provinz Nazareno beschrieben: Die Na-reichsten Proben haben nahezu die Idealzusammensetzung eines idealen Pyrochlors, d.h. . Die Ca-reichsten Varietäten weisen maximal auf, wobei der Besetzungsanteil des Ca am A2+ ca. 93% beträgt. Die Ba-haltigen Mikrolithe sind durch eine Defektstruktur gekennzeichnet, wobei für das mögliche Endglied kein Beispiel in den Daten vorliegt. Das Endglied mit dem geringsten Defektcharakter hat folgende Stöchiometrie:
Resumo:
This thesis focusses on the tectonic evolution and geochronology of part of the Kaoko orogen, which is part of a network of Pan-African orogenic belts in NW Namibia. By combining geochemical, isotopic and structural analysis, the aim was to gain more information about how and when the Kaoko Belt formed. The first chapter gives a general overview of the studied area and the second one describes the basis of the Electron Probe Microanalysis dating method. The reworking of Palaeo- to Mesoproterozoic basement during the Pan-African orogeny as part of the assembly of West Gondwana is discussed in Chapter 3. In the study area, high-grade rocks occupy a large area, and the belt is marked by several large-scale structural discontinuities. The two major discontinuities, the Sesfontein Thrust (ST) and the Puros Shear Zone (PSZ), subdivide the orogen into three tectonic units: the Eastern Kaoko Zone (EKZ), the Central Kaoko Zone (CKZ) and the Western Kaoko Zone (WKZ). An important lineament, the Village Mylonite Zone (VMZ), has been identified in the WKZ. Since plutonic rocks play an important role in understanding the evolution of a mountain belt, zircons from granitoid gneisses were dated by conventional U-Pb, SHRIMP and Pb-Pb techniques to identify different age provinces. Four different age provinces were recognized within the Central and Western part of the belt, which occur in different structural positions. The VMZ seems to mark the limit between Pan-African granitic rocks east of the lineament and Palaeo- to Mesoproterozoic basement to the west. In Chapter 4 the tectonic processes are discussed that led to the Neoproterozoic architecture of the orogen. The data suggest that the Kaoko Belt experienced three main phases of deformation, D1-D3, during the Pan-African orogeny. Early structures in the central part of the study area indicate that the initial stage of collision was governed by underthrusting of the medium-grade Central Kaoko zone below the high-grade Western Kaoko zone, resulting in the development of an inverted metamorphic gradient. The early structures were overprinted by a second phase D2, which was associated with the development of the PSZ and extensive partial melting and intrusion of ~550 Ma granitic bodies in the high-grade WKZ. Transcurrent deformation continued during cooling of the entire belt, giving rise to the localized low-temperature VMZ that separates a segment of elevated Mesoproterozoic basement from the rest of the Western zone in which only Pan-African ages have so far been observed. The data suggest that the boundary between the Western and Central Kaoko zones represents a modified thrust zone, controlling the tectonic evolution of the Kaoko belt. The geodynamic evolution and the processes that generated this belt system are discussed in Chapter 5. Nd mean crustal residence ages of granitoid rocks permit subdivision of the belt into four provinces. Province I is characterised by mean crustal residence ages <1.7 Ga and is restricted to the Neoproterozoic granitoids. A wide range of initial Sr isotopic values (87Sr/86Sri = 0.7075 to 0.7225) suggests heterogeneous sources for these granitoids. The second province consists of Mesoproterozoic (1516-1448 Ma) and late Palaeo-proterozoic (1776-1701 Ma) rocks and is probably related to the Eburnian cycle with Nd model ages of 1.8-2.2 Ga. The eNd i values of these granitoids are around zero and suggest a predominantly juvenile source. Late Archaean and middle Palaeoproterozoic rocks with model ages of 2.5 to 2.8 Ga make up Province III in the central part of the belt and are distinct from two early Proterozoic samples taken near the PSZ which show even older TDM ages of ~3.3 Ga (Province IV). There is no clear geological evidence for the involvement of oceanic lithosphere in the formation of the Kaoko-Dom Feliciano orogen. Chapter 6 presents the results of isotopic analyses of garnet porphyroblasts from high-grade meta-igneous and metasedimentary rocks of the sillimanite-K-feldspar zone. Minimum P-T conditions for peak metamorphism were calculated at 731±10 °C at 6.7±1.2 kbar, substantially lower than those previously reported. A Sm-Nd garnet-whole rock errorchron obtained on a single meta-igneous rock yielded an unexpectedly old age of 692±13 Ma, which is interpreted as an inherited metamorphic age reflecting an early Pan-African granulite-facies event. The dated garnets survived a younger high-grade metamorphism that occurred between ca. 570 and 520 Ma and apparently maintained their old Sm-Nd isotopic systematics, implying that the closure temperature for garnet in this sample was higher than 730 °C. The metamorphic peak of the younger event was dated by electronmicroprobe on monazite at 567±5 Ma. From a regional viewpoint, it is possible that these granulites of igneous origin may be unrelated to the early Pan-African metamorphic evolution of the Kaoko Belt and may represent a previously unrecognised exotic terrane.
Resumo:
The Pelagonian Zone and the Vardar Zone in Greece represent the western part of the Hellenide hinterland (Internal Hellenides). While the Pelagonian Zone comprises predominantly crystalline basement and sedimentary cover rocks, the Vardar Zone has long been regarded as an ophiolite-decorated suture zone separating the Pelagonian Zone from the Serbo-Macedonian Massif to the east. Felsic basement rocks from both areas, with the main focus put on the Pelagonian Zone, were dated in order to identify the major crust-forming episodes and to improve the understanding of the evolutionary history of the region. The interpretation of the single-zircon geochronology results was aided by geochemical investigations. The majority of the basement rocks from the Pelagonian Zone yielded Permo-Carboniferous intrusion ages around 300 Ma, underlining the importance of this crust-forming event for the Internal Hellenides of Greece. Geochemically these basement rocks are classified as subduction-related granitoids, which formed in an active continental margin setting. An important result was the identification of a Precambrian crustal unit within the crystalline basement of the Pelagonian Zone. Orthogneisses from the NW Pelagonian Zone yielded Neoproterozoic ages of c. 700 Ma and are so far the oldest known rocks in Greece. These basement rocks, which are also similar to active margin granitoids, were interpreted as remnants of a terrane, the Florina Terrane, which can be correlated to a Pan-African or Cadomian arc. Since the gneisses contain inherited zircons of Middle to Late Proterozoic ages, the original location of the Florina Terrane was probably at the northwestern margin of Gondwana. In the Vardar Zone an important phase of Upper Jurassic felsic magmatism is documented by igneous formation ages ranging from 155 to 164 Ma. The chemical and isotopic composition of these rocks is also in accord with their formation in a volcanic-arc setting at an active continental margin. Older continental material incorporated in the Vardar Zone is documented by 319-Ma-old gneisses and by inherited zircons of mainly Middle Palaeozoic ages. The prevalence of subduction-related igneous rocks indicates that arc formation and accretion orogeny were the most important processes during the evolution of this part of the Internal Hellenides. The geochronological results demonstrate that most of the Pelagonian Zone and the Vardar Zone crystalline basement formed during distinct pre-Alpine episodes at c. 700, 300 and 160 Ma with a predominance of the Permo-Carboniferous magmatic phase.