36 resultados para trondhjemite


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This thesis summarises the results of four original papers concerning U-Pb geochronology and geochemical evolution of Archaean rocks from the Kuhmo terrain and the Nurmes belt, eastern Finland. The study area belongs to a typical Archaean granite-greenstone terrain, composed of metavolcanic and metasedimentary rocks in generally N-S trending greenstone belts as well as a granitoid-gneiss complex with intervening gneissic and migmatised supracrustal and plutonic rocks. U-Pb data on migmatite mesosomes indicate that the crust surrounding the Tipasjärvi-Kuhmo-Suomussalmi greenstone belt is of varying age. The oldest protolith detected for a migmatite mesosome from the granitoid-gneiss complex is 2.94 Ga, whereas the other dated migmatites protoliths have ages of 2.84 2.79 Ga. The latter protoliths are syngenetic with the majority of volcanic rocks in the adjacent Tipasjärvi-Kuhmo-Suomussalmi greenstone belt. This suggests that the genesis of some of the volcanic rocks within the greenstone belt and surrounding migmatite protoliths could be linked. Metamorphic zircon overgrowths with ages of 2.84 2.81 Ga were also obtained. The non-migmatised plutonic rocks in the Kuhmo terrain and in the Nurmes belt record secular geochemical evolution, typical of Archaean cratons. The studied tonalitic rocks have ages of 2.83 2.75 Ga and they have geochemical characteristics similar to low-Al and high-Al TTD (tonalite-trondhjemite-dacite). The granodiorites, diorites, and gabbros with high Mg/Fe and LILE-enriched characteristics were mostly emplaced between 2.74 2.70 Ga and they exhibit geochemical characteristics typical of Archaean sanukitoid suites. The latest identified plutonic episode took place at 2.70 2.68 Ga, when compositionally heterogeneous leucocratic granitoid rocks, with a variable crustal component, were emplaced. U-Pb data on migmatite leucosomes suggest that leucosome generation may have been coeval with this latest plutonic event. On the basis of available U-Pb and Sm-Nd isotopic data it appears that the plutonic rocks of the Kuhmo terrain and the Nurmes belt do not contain any significant input from Palaeoarchaean sources. A characteristic feature of the Nurmes belt is the presence of migmatised paragneisses, locally preserving primary edimentary structures, with sporadic amphibolite intercalations. U-Pb studies on zircons indicate that the precursors of the Nurmes paragneisses were graywackes that were deposited between 2.71 Ga and 2.69 Ga and that they had a prominent 2.75 2.70 Ga source. Nd isotopic and whole-rock geochemical data for the intercalated amphibolites imply MORB sources. U-Pb data on zircons from the plutonic rocks and paragneisses reveal that metamorphic zircon growth took place at 2.72 2.63 Ga. This was the last tectonothermal event related to cratonisation of the Archaean crust of eastern Finland.

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Sanukitoid series intrusions can be found throughout the Archean Karelian Province of the Fennoscandian shield. All sanukitoids share the same controversial elemental characteristics: they have high content of incompatible elements such as K, Ba, and Sr as well as high content of the compatible elements Mg, Cr, and Ni, and high Mg#. This composition is explained by an enriched mantle wedge origin in a Neoarchean subduction setting. This study concentrates on sanukitoid intrusions and tonalite-trondhjemite-granodiorite series (TTGs) from Finnish part of the Karelian Province. The collected rock samples have been studied in the field and under microscope as well as for their whole-rock (including isotopes) and mineral compositions. The new data together with previously published analyses help us to better understand the petrogenesis, tectonic setting and reworking of the Archean rock units. TTGs from the Karelian Province form a voluminous series of granitoids and reworked migmatites. This study divides TTG series into two subgroups based on their elemental composition: low-HREE (heavy rare earth element) TTGs and high-HREE TTGs indicating pressure differences in their source. Sanukitoid series is a minor, divergent group of intrusions. These intrusions are variable sized, and the texture varies from even-grained to K-feldspar porphyritic. The elemental composition differentiates sanukitoids from more voluminous TTG groups, the SiO2 in sanukitoids varies to include series of gabbro, diorite, and granodiorite. U Pb age determinations from sanukitoid series show temporally limited emplacement between ~ 2745 2715 Ma after the main crust forming period in the area. Hafnium, neodymium, common lead, and oxygene isotopes indicate well homogenized characteristics. Recycled crust has made a variable, yet minor, contribution to sanukitoids, as evidenced by oxygene isotopes and inherited zircon cores. A proposed tectonic setting for the formation of the sanukitoid series is slab breakoff of oceanic lithosphere in subduction setting, with sanukitoids deriving from an enriched mantle wedge. The proposed setting explains some of the peculiar features of sanukitoids, such as their temporally limited occurrence and controversial elemental composition. Sanukitoids would occur after cessation of the regional growth of Archean crust, and they could be derived from mantle wedge previously enriched by melts and fluids from oceanic crust and sediments. A subsequent event during the Paleoproterozoic Svecofennian orogeny at ~1.9 Ga affected the appearance and microstructures of the rocks as well as caused redistribution of lead between minerals and whole rock. However, the deformation was not able to obliterate the original geochemical characteristics of these sanukitoids.

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Eclogites and associated high-pressure (HP) rocks in collisional and accretionary orogenic belts preserve a record of subduction and exhumation, and provide a key constraint on the tectonic evolution of the continents. Most eclogites that formed at high pressures but low temperatures at > 10-11 kbar and 450-650 degrees C can be interpreted as a result of subduction of cold oceanic lithosphere. A new class of high-temperature (HT) eclogites that formed above 900 degrees C and at 14 to 30 kbar occurs in the deep continental crust, but their geodynamic significance and processes of formation are poorly understood. Here we show that Neoarchaean mafic-ultramafic complexes in the central granulite facies region of the Lewisian in NW Scotland contain HP/HT garnet-bearing granulites (retrogressed eclogites), gabbros, Iherzolites, and websterites, and that the HP granulites have garnets that contain inclusions of omphacite. From thermodynamic modeling and compositional isopleths we calculate that peak eclogite-facies metamorphism took place at 24-22 kbar and 1060-1040 degrees C. The geochemical signature of one (G-21) of the samples shows a strong depletion of Eu indicating magma fractionation at a crustal level. The Sm-Nd isochron ages of HP phases record different cooling ages of ca. 2480 and 2330 Ma. We suggest that the layered mafic-ultramafic complexes, which may have formed in an oceanic environment, were subducted to eclogite depths, and exhumed as HP garnet-bearing orogenic peridotites. The layered complexes were engulfed by widespread orthogneisses of tonalite-trondhjemite-granodiorite (TTG) composition with granulite facies assemblages. We propose two possible tectonic models: (1) the fact that the relicts of eclogitic complexes are so widespread in the Scourian can be taken as evidence that a >90 km x 40 km-size slab of continental crust containing mafic-ultramafic complexes was subducted to at least 70 km depth in the late Archaean. During exhumation the gneiss protoliths were retrogressed to granulite facies assemblages, but the mafic-ultramafic rocks resisted retrogression. (2) The layered complexes of mafic and ultramafic rocks were subducted to eclogite-facies depths and during exhumation under crustal conditions they were intruded by the orthogneiss protoliths (TTG) that were metamorphosed in the granulite facies. Apart from poorly defined UHP metamorphic rocks in Norway, the retrogressed eclogites in the central granulite/retrogressed eclogite facies Lewisian region, NW Scotland have the highest crustal pressures so far reported for Archaean rocks, and demonstrate that lithospheric subduction was transporting crustal rocks to HP depths in the Neoarchaean. (C) 2012 International Association for Gondwana Research. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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We report detailed evidence for a new paleo-suture zone (the Kumta suture) on the western margin of southern India. The c. 15-km-wide, westward dipping suture zone contains garnet-biotite, fuchsite-haematite, chlorite-quartz, quartz-phengite schists, biotite augen gneiss, marble and amphibolite. The isochemical phase diagram estimations and the high-Si phengite composition of quartz-phengite schist suggest a near-peak condition of c. 18 kbar at c. 550 degrees C, followed by near-isothermal decompression. The detrital SHRIMP U-Pb zircon ages from quartz-phengite schist give four age populations ranging from 3280 to 2993 Ma. Phengite from quartz-phengite schist and biotite from garnet-biotite schist have K-Ar metamorphic ages of ca. 1326 and ca. 1385 Ma respectively. Electron microprobe-CHIME ages of in situ zircons in quartz-phengite schist (ca. 3750 Ma and ca. 1697 Ma) are consistent with the above results. The Bondla ultramafic-gabbro complex in the west of the Kumta suture compositionally represents an arc with K-Ar biotite ages from gabbro in the range 1644-1536 Ma. On the eastern side of the suture are weakly deformed and unmetamorphosed shallow westward-dipping sedimentary rocks of the Sirsi shelf, which has the following upward stratigraphy: pebbly quartzite/sandstone, turbidite, magnetite iron formation, and limestone; farther east the lower lying quartzite has an unconformable contact with ca. 2571 Ma quartzo-feldspathic gneisses of the Dharwar block with a ca. 1733 Ma biotite cooling age. To the west of the suture is a c. 60-km-wide Karwar block mainly consisting of tonalite-trondhjemite-granodiorite (TTG) and amphibolite. The TTGs have U-Pb zircon magmatic ages of ca. 3200 Ma with a rare inherited core age of ca. 3601 Ma. The K-Ar biotite cooling age from the TTGs (1746 Ma and 1796 Ma) and amphibolite (ca. 1697 Ma) represents late-stage uplift. Integration of geological, structural and geochronological data from western India and eastern Madagascar suggest diachronous ocean closure during the amalgamation of Rodinia; in the north at around ca. 1380 Ma, and a progression toward the south until ca. 750 Ma. Satellite imagery based regional structural lineaments suggests that the Betsimisaraka suture continues into western India as the Kumta suture and possibly farther south toward a suture in the Coorg area, representing in total a c. 1000 km long Rodinian suture. (C) 2013 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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The c. 600 Ma Brasiliano Borborema Province of NE Brazil comprises a complex collage of Precambrian crustal blocks cut by a series of continental-scale shear zones. The predominant basement rocks in the province are 2.1-2.0 Ga Transamazonian gneisses of both juvenile and reworked nature. U-Pb zircon and Sm-Nd whole-rock studies of tonalite-trondhjemite-granodiorite basement gneisses in the NW Ceará or Médio Coreaú domain in the northwestern part of the Borborema Province indicate that this represents a continental fragment formed by 2.35-2.30 Ga juvenile crust. This block has no apparent genetic affinity with any other basement gneisses in the Borborema Province, and it does not represent the tectonized margin of the c. 2.1-2.0 Ga São Luis Craton to the NW. The petrological and geochemical characteristics, as well as the Nd-isotopic signatures of these gneisses, are consistent with their genesis in an island arc setting. This finding documents a period of crustal growth during a period of the Earth's history which is known for its tectonic quiescence and paucity of crust formation. © Geological Society of London 2009.

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The Archean (3.45-2.70Ga) rocks of the São José do Campestre Massif (SJCM) in the Borborema Province (NE Brazil) make up a small area (~6000km2) and are composed of granitoids and metasupracrustal rocks that define a complex magmatic and deformational history. The massif provides the opportunity to study mantle- and crustal-derived magmas generated since the Palaeoarchean. The orthogneisses of the SJCM are composed of: (1) tonalite to granodiorite with diorite enclaves (Bom Jesus gneiss, 3412±8Ma; TDM Nd model ages from 4.1 to 3.5Ga and negative epsilon Nd values); (2) biotite and ferroan-diopside monzogranite (Presidente Juscelino complex, 3356±21Ma and 3251±44Ma; TDM model ages range from 4.1 to 3.4Ga and epsilon Nd values that are slightly positive to negative); (3) hornblende tonalite to granodiorite (Brejinho complex, 3333±77Ma and 3187±8Ma; dominantly positive epsilon Nd values and TDM ages from 3.6 to 3.2Ga); (4) biotite monzogranite (São Pedro do Potengi gneiss, 3120±22Ma; TDM =3.5Ga; negative epsilon Nd value); (5) ferroan-diopside-grossular anorthosite and metagabbro (Senador Elói de Souza complex, 3033±3Ma); and (6) quartz diorite to syenogranite (São José do Campestre complex; 2685±9Ma and 2655±4Ma; negative epsilon Nd values and TDM ages from 3.9 to 3.3Ga). The orthogneisses are subalkaline to faintly alkaline, magnesian to ferroan, M- and I-type granitoids that follow either the K-enrichment or the trondhjemite trends. Each group has a subset with REE characteristics similar to Archean TTG and another that is analogous to Phanerozoic granitoids. They have negative Ta-Nb and Ti anomalies and have trace element contents of granitoids from subduction zones. Geochemical and Nd isotope data suggest that subducted oceanic crust and a depleted and metasomatised mantle wedge both acted as the magma sources. We propose a convergent tectonic model in which hybridisation of the upper mantle occurs through interactions with adakitic or trondhjemitic melts and recycling of earlier crust. The results imply that both the subducted oceanic crust and the mantle wedge played major roles in continent formation throughout successive episodes of arc accretion in Palaeo- and Mesoarchean times. The Archean rocks of the SJCM shares some similarities with the Pilbara, Kaapvaal, West African, and São Francisco cratons. However, the most reliable comparisons with the SJCM are with the neighbouring basement of the Nigeria and Cameroon shields. © 2012 Elsevier B.V.

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O mapeamento geológico realizado à sudeste de Água Azul do Norte/PA, porção norte do Domínio Rio Maria, aliado aos dados petrográficos e geoquímicos permitiram a individualização de associações TTGs e leucogranodioritos. Nesta região, os trabalhos de mapeamento foram realizados apenas em escala regional o que possibilitou a extrapolação da área de ocorrência de rochas similares ao Tonalito Caracol e rondhjemito Mogno. Os TTGs estudados foram individualizados em duas unidades com base no conteúdo de minerais máficos, concentrações de epidoto magmático e no grau de saussuritização (descalcificação) do plagioclásio em: (1) Epidoto-Biotita Tonalito e; (2) Biotita Trondhjemito. Em geral, são rochas que apresentam foliação definida pelo bandamento composicional, localmente pode ser perturbada por dobras e bandas de cisalhamento. Suas características geoquímicas são compatíveis com os TTGs arqueanos do grupo de alto Al2O3, sendo ainda relativamente pobres em elementos ferromagnesianos, com padrões ETRP moderado a fortemente fracionados e anomalias de Eu discretas. As diferenças nas razões La/Yb e anomalia de Eu, possibilitou a discriminação de três grupos distintos de rochas: Os TTGs pertencentes ao grupo de alto La/Yb e Sr/Y são similares às rochas do Trondhjemito Mogno, descritos no Domínio Rio Maria. Estas rochas incluem a maioria das amostras da unidade Biotita Trondhjemito. No caso dos TTGs com médio a baixo La/Yb e Sr/Y quando comparadas com as rochas do Domínio Rio Maria possuem forte correlação com o Tonalito Caracol. Estes grupos são compostos principalmente pela unidade Epidoto-Biotita Tonalito, incluindo também amostras isoladas do Biotita Trondhjemito. Com base nos critérios utilizados acima, os leucogranodioritos da área foram divididos em dois grupos: Biotita Granodiorito e Leucogranodiorito. As rochas do Biotita Granodiorito possuem ampla ocorrência espacial na porção oeste da área, relações de campo mostram que são intrusivas nos granitoides TTGs. Os dados geoquímicos apontam que o Biotita Granodiorito possui padrões de ETR fortemente fracionados, com alta razão La/Yb (33 – 186) e anomalia de Eu positiva (1,11 < Eu/Eu* < 3,26), enquanto os leucogranodioritos mostram padrões levemente fracionados, com moderadas razões La/Yb (24,7 – 34,7) e anomalia de Eu ausente (Eu/Eu*= 1,03). Os diagramas de Harker para elementos maiores e traços não favorecem uma ligação genética por processo de cristalização fracionada entre o Biotita Granodiorito e as associações TTGs, uma vez que apresentam trends de evolução distintos, indicando portanto que as condições de sua gênese e diferenciação foram bem diferentes, tampouco por fusão parcial de uma fonte TTG, pelo fato de não apresentar significante anomalia negativa de Eu, bem como por exibir padrões similares de fracionamento de ETR em relação aos TTGs, atestando que essas rochas provavelmente não foram oriundas de magmas precursores desses TTGs.

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Os estudos geológicos desenvolvidos na porção leste do Subdomínio de Transição, Província Carajás, a sul da cidade de Canaã dos Carajás e a norte de Sapucaia, permitiram a identificação, individualização e caracterização de uma diversidade de unidades arqueanas, anteriormente englobadas no Complexo Xingu. A unidade mais antiga da área compreende anfibólio tonalitos correlacionados ao Tonalito São Carlos (~2,92 Ga), com foliação orientada segundo NW-SE a E-W, ou, por vezes, aspecto homogêneo. Geoquimicamente, diferem das típicas associações tonalito-trondhjemito-granodiorito (TTG) arqueanas por apresentarem enriquecimento em TiO2, MgO e CaO, baixos teores de Sr e similares de Rb para amostras com menores teores de sílica, que se refletem em razões Rb/Sr mais elevadas e Sr/Ba mais baixas. Os padrões dos ETR mostram baixo a moderado fracionamento de ETR pesados em relação aos leves, e anomalias negativas de Eu discretas ou moderadas. Seguindo na estratigrafia, e também como a unidade de maior expressão na área, ocorrem rochas de afinidade TTG correspondentes ao Trodhjemito Colorado (~2,87 Ga), intensamente deformadas, com foliações NW-SE a E-W. Intrusivos nesta unidade, ao sul da área, aflora um corpo de aproximadamente 40 km2, de rochas de composição leucogranodiorítica porfirítica denominados de Leucogranodiorito Pantanal, e seccionado em sua porção oeste por leucogranitos deformados de composição monzogranítica. O Leucogranodiorito Pantanal têm afinidade cálcio-alcalina peraluminosa, enriquecimento em Ba e Sr, e padrões de ETR sem anomalias expressivas de Eu e com acentuado fracionamento de ETRP, que refletem em altas razões La/Yb semelhante com a Suíte Guarantã (~2,87 Ga) do Domínio Rio Maria. Os leucogranitos revelam assinatura geoquímica de granitos tipo-A reduzidos, possivelmente, originados a partir da fusão desidratada de rochas cálcico-alcalinas peraluminosas durante o Neoarqueano. Além dessas unidades, na porção leste do Leucogranodiorito Pantanal, hornblenda-biotita granito neoarquenos tipo-A oxidados da Suíte Vila Jussara. Ainda correlacionáveis ao magmatismo subalcalino neoarqueano, na porção norte, ocorrem dois stocks graniticos. São tonalitos a granodioritos com assinatura geoquímica de granitos tipo-A oxidados similares a Suíte Vila Jussara, e monzogranitos com assinatura de granitos tipo-A reduzidos que se assemelham a Suíte Planalto. Ao norte da área ocorre uma associação máfico-enderbitica composta de hornblendanoritos, piroxênio-hornblenda-gabros, piroxênio-hornblenda-monzonito, hornblenda-gabros, anfibolitos e enderbitos. Essas rochas estão intensamente deformadas e recristalizadas, provavelmente por retrometamorfismo na presença de água de rochas de série noríticavii charnockítica de origem ígnea associada com outras variedades de rochas não necessariamente cogenéticas. Seu comportamento geoquímico sugere que os hornblendanorito, hornblenda-gabros e anfibolitos são toleíticos subalcalinos, enquanto que os enderbitos, piroxênio-hornblenda-gabro e piroxênio-hornblenda-monzonito têm assinatura cálcico-alcalina. As baixas razões La/Yb das rochas máficas indicam baixo grau de fracionamento, enquanto que as altas razões La/Yb dos enderbitos é indicativo de fracionamento expressivo dos ETR pesados durante a formação ou diferenciação dos seus magmas, e a concavidade no padrão de ETR pesados, indica provável influência de fracionamento de anfibólio durante sua evolução. Na porção central e centro-norte da área ocorrem biotita-monzogranitos peraluminosos, de assinatura cálcio-alcalina, que podem ser desdobrados em dois grupos geoquímicos distindo. Um tem altas razões Sr/Y e (La/Yb)n, mostram possível afinidade com o Granito Bom Jesus da área de Canaã dos Carajás. O outro tem mais baixa razão (La/Yb)n se aproxima mais do Granito Serra Dourada e do Granito Cruzadão também da área de Canaã dos Carajás. Essa comparação deverá ser aprofundada com dados geocronológicos e maior número de amostras.

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ABSTRACT: The eastern border of the Transition Subdomain of the Carajás Province is constituteddominantly of Archean tonalite-trondhjemite-granodiorite (TTG). Deformed monzogranites, similar to the Planalto granite suite, and metagabbros inserted in association mafic-enderbitic also occur. Paleoproterozoic isotropic granites and mafic dykes devoid of significant deformation crosscut the Archean lithologies. The TTGs are exposed as blocks or as flat outcrops in areas of low relief and commonly include quartz-diorite enclaves. The TTG rocks display gray colour and are generally medium-grained, showing compositional banding or, sometimes, homogeneous aspect. They show commonly a NW-SW to E-W trending foliation with vertical to subvertical dips and were submitted to NE-SW stress. Locally, it was identified a NE-SW foliation transposed to E-W along shear zones. In some instances, they exhibit mylonitic to protomilonitics features, registered in the oval form of plagioclase porphyroclasts or boudinated leucogranitics veins. Two petrographic varieties are recognized for this association: biotite-trondjhemite and subordinate biotite-granodiorites, both have similar mineralogical and textural aspects and are characterized by a poorly preserved igneous texture, partially overwritten by an intense recrystallization. EDS analyses revealed that the plagioclase is a calcic oligoclase (An27-19), with Or ranging from 0.6 - 2.3%. The biotites are ferromagnesian, with dominance of Fe over Mg (Fe / [Fe + Mg] ranging from 0.54 to 0.59) and the analyzed epidote presents pistacite contents ranging from 23 to 27.6 % and plot mostly in the range of magmatic epidotes. The trondhjemite shows all typical characteristics of Archean TTG suites. They have high La/Yb and Sr/Y ratios, suggesting they were derived from the partial melting of garnet amphibolite sources at high pressures (ca. 1.5 GPa) or, at least, that their magmatic evolution was controlled by the fractionation of garnet and possibly amphibole, without significant influence of plagioclase. The studied TTGs show similarities with Mariazinha tonalite and Mogno trondjemite, of the Rio Maria Domain, Colorado trondhjemite and, in at a lesser degree, to the Rio Verde trondhjemite, of the Carajás Domain. The granodiorites display a calc-alkaline signature and shows LILE enrichment, specifically K2O, Rb and Ba, when compared to the trondhjemites, but still preserving some geochemical features of the TTG. The geochemical data indicate that the trondhjemite and granodiorite are not related by fractional crystallization. An origin of the granodiorite by partial melting of the TTG rocks is also discarded. The granodiorite could, however, result of contamination of TTG magmas by lithosphere metasomatism or assimilation of sediments from subducted oceanic crust along trondhjemite liquid genesis. In the eastern portion of the mapped area, it was identified a small, E-W trending granite stock clearly controlled by shear zones. The rocks have mylonitic textures, characterized by ovoid-shaped feldspar porphyroclasts, wrapped by recrystallized quartz and mica. These granitic rocks have geochemical signatures of reduced A-type granites and are similar to the Planalto granite suite. Boulders of mafic rocks crop out locally in the northern portion of the area. These rocks show a dominant granoblastic texture, and are mainly composed of amphibole and plagioclase, with subordinate biotite and quartz. In the northern part of the mapped area, it was identified a body of isotropic granite without significant deformation and showing locally rapakivi textures. This granitic pluton was correlated to the Paleoproterozoic A-type granites, represented in the Carajás Domain by the Serra dos Carajás suite and Rio Branco Granite. These granites were not studied in detail. The geological and geochemical aspects shown by the Archean granitoids identified in the eastern part of the Transition Subdomain implies in the existence of significant TTG rocks in the Transition Subdomain. This reinforces the hypothesis that the Transition Subdomain could represent an extension of the Rio Maria Domain, but affected by crustal reworking events in the Neoarchean.

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O mapeamento geológico realizado na área de Nova Canadá, porção sul do Domínio Carajás, aliado aos estudos petrográficos e geoquímicos, permitiram a caracterização de pelo menos três novas unidades que antes estavam inseridas no contexto geológico do Complexo Xingu. São elas: (i) Leucogranodiorito Nova Canadá, que é constituído por rochas leucogranodioríticas mais enriquecidas em Al2O3, CaO, Na2O, Ba, Sr e na razão Sr/Y, que mostram fortes afinidades geoquímicas com a Suíte Guarantã do Domínio Rio Maria, as quais também podem ser correlacionadas aos TTGs Transicionais do Cráton Yilgarn. Estas rochas apresentam padrão ETR levemente fracionado, mostram baixas razões (La/Yb)N e anomalias negativas de Eu ausentes ou discretas; (ii) Leucogranito Velha Canadá, caracterizado pelos conteúdos mais elevados de SiO2, Fe2O3, TiO2, K2O, Rb, HFSE (Zr, Y e Nb), das razões K2O/Na2O, FeOt/(FeOt+MgO), Ba/Sr e Rb/Sr. Apresentam dois padrões distintos de ETR: (a) baixas à moderadas razões (La/Yb)N com anomalias negativas de Eu acentuadas; e (b) moderadas à altas razões (La/Yb)N, com anomalias negativas de Eu discretas e um padrão côncavo dos ETRP. Em diversos aspectos, as rochas do granito Velha Canadá mostram fortes afinidades com os leucogranitos potássicos tipo Xinguara e Mata Surrão do Domínio Rio Maria, assim como aqueles da região da Canaã dos Carajás e mais discretamente com os granitos de baixo Ca do Cráton Yilgarn. Para a origem das rochas do Leucogranodiorito Nova Canadá é admitida a hipótese de cristalização fracionada a partir de líquidos com afinidade sanukitóide, seguido por processos de mistura entre estes e líquidos de composição trondhjemítica, enquanto que para aquelas de alto K do Leucogranito Velha Canadá, acreditase na fusão parcial de metatonalitos tipo TTG em diferentes níveis crustais, para gerar líquidos com tais características; e (iii) associações trondhjemíticas com afinidade TTG de alto Al2O3, Na2O e baixo K2O, compatíveis com os granitoides arqueanos da série cálcioalcalina tonalítica-trondhjemítica de baixo potássio. Foram distinguidas duas variedades: (a) biotita-trondhjemito com estruturação marcada pelo desenvolvimento de feições que indicam atuação de pelo menos dois eventos deformacionais em estágios sin- a pós-magmáticos, como bandamentos composicionais, dobras e indícios de migmatização; e (b) muscovita ± biotita trondhjemito que é distinguido da variedade anterior pela presença da muscovita, saussuritização do plagioclásio, textura equigranular média e atuação discreta da deformação com o desenvolvimento de uma foliação E-W de baixo angulo. A primeira variedade destes litotipos, que ocorre predominantemente na porção norte, tem ocorrência restrita. Com intensa deformação e prováveis feições de anatexia (migmatitos) podem indicar que estas rochas tenham sido afetadas por um retrabalhamento crustal, ligado à geração dos leucogranitos dominantemente descritos na área. Os trondhjemitos do sul da área são mais enriquecidos em Fe2O3, MgO, TiO2, CaO, Zr, Rb, e na razão Rb/Sr em relação aos trondhjemitos da porção norte da área. Estas exibem ainda padrões fracionados de ETR, com variações nos conteúdos de ETRP, além da ausência de anomalias de Eu e Sr, e baixos conteúdos de Y e Yb. Tais feições são tipicamente atribuídas à magmas gerados por fusão parcial de uma fonte máfica em diferentes profundidades, com aumento da influência da granada no resíduo e a falta de plagioclásio tanto na fase residual como na fracionante. Em uma análise geral, a disposição dos trends geoquímicos evolutivos de ambas as variedades sugere que estas unidades não são comagmáticas. As afinidades geoquímicas entre as rochas da área de Nova Canadá com aquelas do Domínio Mesoarqueano Rio Maria, poderiam nos levar a entender a região de Nova Canadá como uma extensão do Rio Maria para norte, enquanto que para aquelas do Leucogranito Velha Canadá, que são mais jovens e geradas já no Neoarqueano, se descarta a idéia de associação com os mesmos eventos tectono-magmáticos que atuaram em Rio Maria.

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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.

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Die vorliegende Dissertation behandelt die Gesamtgesteinsanalyse stabiler Siliziumisotope mit Hilfe einer „Multi Collector-ICP-MS“. Die Analysen fanden in Kooperation mit dem „Royal Museum for Central Africa“ in Belgien statt. Einer der Schwerpunkte des ersten Kapitels ist die erstmalige Analyse des δ30Si –Wertes an einem konventionellen Nu PlasmaTM „Multi-Collector ICP-MS“ Instrument, durch die Eliminierung der den 30Si “peak” überlagernden 14N16O Interferenz. Die Analyse von δ30Si wurde durch technische Modifikationen der Anlage erreicht, welche eine höherer Massenauflösung ermöglichten. Die sorgsame Charakterisierung eines adäquaten Referenzmaterials ist unabdingbar für die Abschätzung der Genauigkeit einer Messung. Die Bestimmung der „U.S. Geological Survey“ Referenzmaterialien bildet den zweiten Schwerpunkt dieses Kapitales. Die Analyse zweier hawaiianischer Standards (BHVO-1 and BHVO-2), belegt die präzise und genaue δ30Si Bestimmung und bietet Vergleichsdaten als Qualitätskontrolle für andere Labore. Das zweite Kapitel befasst sich mit kombinierter Silizium-/Sauerstoffisotope zur Untersuchung der Entstehung der Silizifizierung vulkanischer Gesteine des „Barberton Greenstone Belt“, Südafrika. Im Gegensatz zu heute, war die Silizifizierung der Oberflächennahen Schichten, einschließlich der „Chert“ Bildung, weitverbreitete Prozesse am präkambrischen Ozeanboden. Diese Horizonte sind Zeugen einer extremen Siliziummobilisierung in der Frühzeit der Erde. Dieses Kapitel behandelt die Analyse von Silizium- und Sauerstoffisotopen an drei unterschiedlichen Gesteinsprofilen mit unterschiedlich stark silizifizierten Basalten und überlagernden geschichteten „Cherts“ der 3.54, 3.45 und 3.33 Mill. Jr. alten Theespruit, Kromberg und Hooggenoeg Formationen. Siliziumisotope, Sauerstoffisotope und die SiO2-Gehalte demonstrieren in allen drei Gesteinsprofilen eine positive Korrelation mit dem Silizifizierungsgrad, jedoch mit unterschiedlichen Steigungen der δ30Si-δ18O-Verhältnisse. Meerwasser wird als Quelle des Siliziums für den Silizifizierungsprozess betrachtet. Berechnungen haben gezeigt, dass eine klassische Wasser-Gestein Wechselwirkung die Siliziumisotopenvariation nicht beeinflussen kann, da die Konzentration von Si im Meerwasser zu gering ist (49 ppm). Die Daten stimmen mit einer Zwei-Endglieder-Komponentenmischung überein, mit Basalt und „Chert“ als jeweilige Endglieder. Unsere gegenwärtigen Daten an den „Cherts“ bestätigen einen Anstieg der Isotopenzusammensetzung über der Zeit. Mögliche Faktoren, die für unterschiedliche Steigungen der δ30Si-δ18O Verhältnisse verantwortlich sein könnten sind Veränderungen in der Meerwasserisotopie, der Wassertemperatur oder sekundäre Alterationseffekte. Das letzte Kapitel beinhaltet potentielle Variationen in der Quellregion archaischer Granitoide: die Si-Isotopen Perspektive. Natriumhaltige Tonalit-Trondhjemit-Granodiorit (TTG) Intrusiva repräsentieren große Anteile der archaischen Kruste. Im Gegensatz dazu ist die heutige Kruste kaliumhaltiger (GMS-Gruppe: Granit-Monzonite-Syenite). Prozesse, die zu dem Wechsel von natriumhaltiger zu kaliumhaltiger Kruste führten sind die Thematik diesen Kapitels. Siliziumisotopenmessungen wurden hier kombiniert mit Haupt- und Spurenelementanalysen an unterschiedlichen Generationen der 3.55 bis 3.10 Mill. Yr. alten TTG und GMS Intrusiva aus dem Arbeitsgebiet. Die δ30Si-Werte in den unterschiedlichen Plutonit Generationen zeigen einen leichten Anstieg der Isotopie mit der Zeit, wobei natriumhaltige Intrusiva die niedrigste Si-Isotopenzusammensetzung aufweisen. Der leichte Anstieg in der Siliziumisotopenzusammensetzung über die Zeit könnte auf unterschiedliche Temperaturbedingungen in der Quellregion der Granitoide hinweisen. Die Entstehung von Na-reichen, leichten d30Si Granitoiden würde demnach bei höheren Temperaturen erfolgen. Die Ähnlichkeit der δ30Si-Werte in archaischen K-reichen Plutoniten und phanerozoischen K-reichen Plutoniten wird ebenfalls deutlich.

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Tonalite-trondhjemite-granodiorite (TTG) gneisses form up to two-thirds of the preserved Archean continental crust and there is considerable debate regarding the primary magmatic processes of the generation of these rocks. The popular theories indicate that these rocks were formed by partial melting of basaltic oceanic crust which was previously metamorphosed to garnet-amphibolite and/or eclogite facies conditions either at the base of thick oceanic crust or by subduction processes.rnThis study investigates a new aspect regarding the source rock for Archean continental crust which is inferred to have had a bulk compostion richer in magnesium (picrite) than present-day basaltic oceanic crust. This difference is supposed to originate from a higher geothermal gradient in the early Archean which may have induced higher degrees of partial melting in the mantle, which resulted in a thicker and more magnesian oceanic crust. rnThe methods used to investigate the role of a more MgO-rich source rock in the formation of TTG-like melts in the context of this new approach are mineral equilibria calculations with the software THERMOCALC and high-pressure experiments conducted from 10–20 kbar and 900–1100 °C, both combined in a forward modelling approach. Initially, P–T pseudosections for natural rock compositions with increasing MgO contents were calculated in the system NCFMASHTO (Na2O–CaO–FeO–MgO–Al2O3–SiO2–H2O–TiO2) to ascertain the metamorphic products from rocks with increasing MgO contents from a MORB up to a komatiite. A small number of previous experiments on komatiites showed the development of pyroxenite instead of eclogite and garnet-amphibolite during metamorphism and established that melts of these pyroxenites are of basaltic composition, thus again building oceanic crust instead of continental crust.rnThe P–T pseudosections calculated represent a continuous development of their metamorphic products from amphibolites and eclogites towards pyroxenites. On the basis of these calculations and the changes within the range of compositions, three picritic Models of Archean Oceanic Crust (MAOC) were established with different MgO contents (11, 13 and 15 wt%) ranging between basalt and komatiite. The thermodynamic modelling for MAOC 11, 13 and 15 at supersolidus conditions is imprecise since no appropriate melt model for metabasic rocks is currently available and the melt model for metapelitic rocks resulted in unsatisfactory calculations. The partially molten region is therfore covered by high-pressure experiments. The results of the experiments show a transition from predominantly tonalitic melts in MAOC 11 to basaltic melts in MAOC 15 and a solidus moving towards higher temperatures with increasing magnesium in the bulk composition. Tonalitic melts were generated in MAOC 11 and 13 at pressures up to 12.5 kbar in the presence of garnet, clinopyroxene, plagioclase plus/minus quartz (plus/minus orthopyroxene in the presence of quartz and at lower pressures) in the absence of amphibole but it could not be explicitly indicated whether the tonalitic melts coexisting with an eclogitic residue and rutile at 20 kbar do belong to the Archean TTG suite. Basaltic melts were generated predominantly in the presence of granulite facies residues such as amphibole plus/minus garnet, plagioclase, orthopyroxene that lack quartz in all MAOC compositions at pressures up to 15 kbar. rnThe tonalitic melts generated in MAOC 11 and 13 indicate that thicker oceanic crust with more magnesium than that of a modern basalt is also a viable source for the generation of TTG-like melts and therefore continental crust in the Archean. The experimental results are related to different geologic settings as a function of pressure. The favoured setting for the generation of early TTG-like melts at 15 kbar is the base of an oceanic crust thicker than existing today or by melting of slabs in shallow subduction zones, both without interaction of tonalic melts with the mantle. Tonalitic melts at 20 kbar may have been generated below the plagioclase stability by slab melting in deeper subduction zones that have developed with time during the progressive cooling of the Earth, but it is unlikely that those melts reached lower pressure levels without further mantle interaction.rn

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This paper reports results of an investigation of a representative collection of samples recovered by deep-sea drilling from the oceanic basement 10 miles west of the rift valley axis in the crest zone of the Mid- Atlantic Ridge at 15°44'N (Sites 1275B and 1275D). Drilling operations were carried out during Leg 209 of the Drilling Vessel JOIDES Resolution within the framework of the Ocean Drilling Program (ODP). The oceanic crust was penetrated to depth of 108.7 m at Site 1275B and 209 m at Site 1275D. We reconstructed the following sequence of magmatic and metamorphic events resulting in the formation of a typical oceanic core complex of slow-spreading ridges: (1) formation of strongly fractionated (enriched in iron and titanium) tholeiitic magmatic melt parental to gabbroids under investigation in a large magma chamber located in a shallow mantle and operating for a long time under steady-state conditions; (2) transfer of the parental magmatic melt of the gabbroids to the base of the oceanic crust, its interaction with host mantle peridotites, and formation of troctolites and plagioclase peridotites; (3) intrusion of enriched trondhjemite melts as veins and dikes in the early formed plutonic complex, contact recrystallization of the gabbro, and development in the peridotite-gabbro complex of enriched geochemical signatures owing to influence of trondhjemite injections; (4) emplacement of dolerite dikes (transformed to diabases); (5) metamorphism of upper epidoteamphibolite facies with participation of marine fluids; and (6) rapid exhumation of the plutonic complex to the seafloor accompanied by greenschist-facies metamorphism. Distribution patterns of Sr and Nd isotopes and strongly incompatible elements in the rocks suggest contributions from two melt sources to the magmatic evolution of the MAR crest at 15°44'N: a depleted reservoir responsible for formation of the gabbros and diabases and an enriched reservoir, from which trondhjemites (granophyres) were derived.