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1.
Abstract Two varieties of charnockites are recognized in the Dharwar craton of southern India. The style and sequence of structures in one charnockite variety, and related intermediate to basic granulites, are similar to those in the supracrustal rocks of the Dharwar Supergroup and the adjacent Peninsular Gneiss. This style has isoclinal folds with long limbs and sharp hinges with an axial planar fabric in some instances. Additional evidence of flattening is provided by pinch-and-swell and boudinage structures, with basic granulites forming boudins in the more ductile charnockites/enderbites in the limbs of isoclinal folds. These folds are involved in near-coaxial upright folding resulting in the bending of the axial planes of the isoclinal folds and the associated boudins. All these structures are overprinted by non-coaxial upright folds with axial planes striking nearly N–S. The map pattern of charnockites suggests that this sequence of structures is present not only on a mesoscopic scale, but also on a macroscopic scale. Charnockites of this variety provide, in some instances, evidence of having been migmatized to give rise to hornblende–biotite gneiss and biotite gneiss, which form a part of the Peninsular Gneiss terrane.
The second variety comprises charnockite sensu stricto with an entirely different structural style. This type occurs in the tensional domains of the hinge zones of the later buckle folds, in the necks of foliation boudinage, in shear zones and in release joints parallel to the axial planes of the later folds in the Peninsular Gneiss. Because the non-coaxial later folds are associated with a strain pattern different from, and later than, that of the isoclinal folds of the first generation, it follows that charnockites of the Dharwar craton have evolved in at least two distinct phases, separate both in time and in process. 相似文献
The second variety comprises charnockite sensu stricto with an entirely different structural style. This type occurs in the tensional domains of the hinge zones of the later buckle folds, in the necks of foliation boudinage, in shear zones and in release joints parallel to the axial planes of the later folds in the Peninsular Gneiss. Because the non-coaxial later folds are associated with a strain pattern different from, and later than, that of the isoclinal folds of the first generation, it follows that charnockites of the Dharwar craton have evolved in at least two distinct phases, separate both in time and in process. 相似文献
2.
In the Dharwar tectonic province, the Peninsular Gneiss was considered to mark an event separating the deposition of the older
supracrustal Sargur Group and the younger supracrustal Dharwar Supergroup. Compelling evidence for the evolution of the Peninsular
Gneiss, a polyphase migmatite, spanning over almost a billion years from 3500 Ma to 2500 Ma negates a stratigraphic status
for this complex, so that the decisive argument for separating the older and younger supracrustal groups loses its basis.
Correlatable sequence of superposed folding in all the supracrustal rocks, the Peninsular Gneiss and the banded granulites,
indicate that the gneiss ‘basement’ deformed in a ductile manner along with the cover rocks. An angular unconformity between
the Sargur Group and the Dharwar Super-group, suggested from some areas in recent years, has been shown to be untenable on
the basis of detailed studies, A number of small enclaves distributed throughout the gneissic terrane, with an earlier deformational,
metamorphic and migmatitic history, provide the only clue to the oldest component which has now been extensively reworked. 相似文献
3.
K. Naha A. Rai Choudhuri V. Ranjan R. Srinivasan 《Journal of Earth System Science》1995,104(3):327-347
The supracrustal enclave within the Peninsular Gneiss in the Honakere arm of the Chitradurga-Karighatta belt comprises tremolite-chlorite
schists within which occur two bands of quartzite coalescing east of Jakkanahalli(12°39′N; 76°41′E), with an amphibolite band
in the core. Very tight to isoclinal mesoscopic folds on compositional bands cut across in the hinge zones by an axial planar
schistosity, and the nearly orthogonal relation between compositional bands and this schistosity at the termination of the
tremolite-chlorite schist band near Javanahalli, points to the presence of a hinge of a large-scale, isoclinal early fold
(F1). That the map pattern, with an NNE-plunging upright antiform and a complementary synform of macroscopic scale, traces folds
'er generation (F
2),is proved by the varying attitude of both compositional bands (S0) and axial pranar schistosity (S
1), which are effectively parallel in a major part of the area. A crenulation cleavage (S
2) has developed parallel to the axial planes of theF
2 folds at places. TheF
2 folds range usually from open to rarely isoclinal style, with theF
1 andF
2 axes nearly parallel. Evidence of type 3 fold interference is also provided by the map pattern of a quartzite band in the
Borikoppalu area to the north, coupled with younging directions from current bedding andS
0
-S
1 inter-relation.
Although statistically theF
1 andF
2 linear structures have the same orientation, detailed studies of outcrops and hand specimens indicate that the two may make
as high an angle as 90°. Usually, in these instances, theF
1 lineations are unreliable around theF
2 axes, implying that theF
2 folding was by flexural slip. In zones with very tight to almost isoclinalF
2 folding, however, buckling attendant with flattening has caused a spread of theF
1 lineations almost in a plane. Initial divergence in orientation of theF
1 lineations due to extreme flattening duringF
1 folding has also resulted in a variation in the angle between theF
1 andF
2lineations in some instances. Upright later folding (F3) with nearly E-W strike of axial planes has led to warps on schistosity, plunge reversals of theF
1 andF
2 axes, and increase in the angle between theF
1 andF
2 lineations at some places. Large-scale mapping in the Borikoppalu sector, where the supposed Sargur rocks with ENE ‘trend’
abut against the N-‘trending’ rocks of the Dharwar Supergroup, shows a continuity of rock formations and structures across
the hinge of a large-scaleF
2 fold. This observation renders the notion, that there is an angular unconformity here between the rocks of the Sargur Group
and the Dharwar Supergroup, untenable. 相似文献
4.
In spite of detailed geological investigations of the Dharwar craton since the 1890s, its principal lithological units, structure
and chronology remain contentious. Important new work on lithostratigraphy, basin development, structure, geochemistry and
geochronology has led to wide-ranging speculation on the Late Archaean plate tectonic setting. Much of the speculation is
based on uniformitarian models which contrast with a recent proposal that the evolution of the craton was controlled by gravity-driven
processes with no crustal shortening. 相似文献
5.
Synplutonic mafic dykes from late Archaean granitoids in the Eastern Dharwar Craton,southern India 总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2
M. Jayananda T. Miyazaki R. V. Gireesh N. Mahesha T. Kano 《Journal of the Geological Society of India》2009,73(1):117-130
We present a first overview of the synplutonic mafic dykes (mafic injections) from the 2.56–2.52 Ga calcalkaline to potassic
plutons in the Eastern Dharwar Craton (EDC). The host plutons comprise voluminous intrusive facies (dark grey clinopyroxene-amphibole
rich monzodiorite and quartz monzonite, pinkish grey porphyritic monzogranite and grey granodiorite) located in the central
part of individual pluton, whilst subordinate anatectic facies (light grey and pink granite) confined to the periphery. The
enclaves found in the plutons include highly angular screens of xenoliths of the basement, rounded to pillowed mafic magmatic
enclaves (MME) and most spectacular synplutonic mafic dykes. The similar textures of MME and adjoining synplutonic mafic dykes
together with their spatial association and occasional transition of MME to dismembered synplutonic mafic dykes imply a genetic
link between them. The synplutonic dykes occur in varying dimension ranging from a few centimeter width upto 200 meters width
and are generally dismembered or disrupted and rarely continuous. Necking of dyke along its length and back veining of more
leucocratic variant of the host is common feature. They show lobate as well as sharp contacts with chilled margins suggesting
their injection during different stages of crystallization of host plutons in magma chamber. Local interaction, mixing and
mingling processes are documented in all the studied crustal corridors in the EDC. The observed mixing, mingling, partial
hybridization, MME and emplacement of synplutonic mafic dykes can be explained by four stage processes: (1) Mafic magma injected
during very early stage of crystallization of host felsic magma, mixing of mafic and felsic host magma results in hybridization
with occasional MME; (2) Mafic magma introduced slightly later, the viscosities of two magmas may be different and permit
only mingling where by each component retain their identity; (3) When mafic magma injected into crystallizing granitic host
magma with significant crystal content, the mafic magma is channeled into early fractures and form dismembered synplutonic
mafic dykes and (4) Mafic injections enter into largely crystallized (>80% crystals) granitic host results in continuous dykes
with sharp contacts. The origin of mafic magmas may be related to development of fractures to mantle depth during crystallization
of host magmas which results in the decompression melting of mantle source. The resultant hot mafic melts with low viscosity
rise rapidly into the crystallizing host magma chamber where they interact depending upon the crystallinity and viscosity
of the host. These hot mafic injections locally cause reversal of crystallization of the felsic host and induce melting and
resultant melts in turn penetrate the crystallizing mafic body as back veining. Field chronology indicates injection of mafic
magmas is synchronous with emplacement of anatectic melts and slightly predates the 2.5 Ga metamorphic event which affected
the whole Archaean crust. The injection of mafic magmas into the crystallizing host plutons forms the terminal Archaean magmatic
event and spatially associated with reworking and cratonization of Archaean crust in the EDC. 相似文献
6.
Sukanta Roy Labani Ray Anurup Bhattacharya R. Srinivasan 《International Journal of Earth Sciences》2008,97(2):245-256
The Late Archaean Closepet Granite batholith in south India is exposed at different crustal levels grading from greenschist
facies in the north through amphibolite and granulite facies in the south along a ∼400 km long segment in the Dharwar craton.
Two areas, Pavagada and Magadi, located in the Main Mass of the batholith, best represent the granitoid of the greenschist
and amphibolite facies crustal levels respectively. Heat flow estimates of 38 mW m−2 from Pavagada and 25 mW m−2 from Magadi have been obtained through measurements in deep (430 and 445 m) and carefully sited boreholes. Measurements made
in four boreholes of opportunity in Pavagada area yield a mean heat flow of 39 ± 4 (s.d.) mW m−2, which is in good agreement with the estimate from deep borehole. The study, therefore, demonstrates a clear-cut heat flow
variation concomitant with the crustal levels exposed in the two areas. The mean heat production estimates for the greenschist
facies and amphibolite facies layers constituting the Main Mass of the batholith are 2.9 and 1.8 μW m−3, respectively. The enhanced heat flow in the Pavagada area is consistent with the occurrence of a radioelement-enriched 2-km-thick
greenschist facies layer granitoid overlying the granitoid of the amphibolite facies layer which is twice as thick as represented
in the Magadi area. The crustal heat production models indicate similar mantle heat flow estimates in the range 12–14 mW m−2, consistent with the other parts of the greenstone-granite-gneiss terrain of the Dharwar craton. 相似文献
7.
M. Ramakrishnan 《Journal of the Geological Society of India》2009,73(1):101-116
Mafic rocks of Western Dharwar Craton (WDC) belong to two greenstone cycles of Sargur Group (3.1–3.3 Ga) and Dharwar Supergroup
(2.6–2.8 Ga), belonging to different depositional environments. Proterozoic mafic dyke swarms (2.4, 2.0–2.2 and 1.6 Ga) constitute
the third important cycle. Mafic rocks of Sargur Group mainly constitute a komatiitic-tholeiite suite, closely associated
with layered basic-ultrabasic complexes. They form linear ultramaficmafic belts, and scattered enclaves associated with orthoquartzite-carbonate-pelite-BIF
suite. Since the country rocks of Peninsular Gneiss intrude these rocks and dismember them, stratigraphy of Sargur Group is
largely conceptual and its tectonic environment speculative. It is believed that the Sargur tholeiites are not fractionated
from komatiites, but might have been generated and evolved from a similar mantle source at shallower depths. The layered basic-ultrabasic
complexes are believed to be products of fractionation from tholeiitic parent magma. The Dharwar mafic rocks are essentially
a bimodal basalt-rhyolite association that is dominated by Fe-rich and normal tholeiites. Calc-alkaline basalts and andesites
are nearly absent, but reference to their presence in literature pertains mainly to carbonated, spilitized and altered tholeiitic
suites. Geochemical discrimination diagrams of Dharwar lavas favour island arc settings that include fore-, intra- and back-arcs.
The Dharwar mafic rocks are possibly derived by partial melting of a lherzolite mantle source and involved in fractionation
of olivine and pyroxene followed by plagioclase. Distinctive differences in the petrography and geochemistry of mafic rocks
across regional unconformities between Sargur Group and Dharwar Supergroup provide clinching evidences in favour of distinguishing
two greenstone cycles in the craton. This has also negated the earlier preliminary attempts to lump together all mafic volcanics
into a single contemporaneous suite, leading to erroneous interpretations. After giving allowances for differences in depositional
and tectonic settings, the chemical distinction between Sargur and Dharwar mafic suites throws light on secular variations
and crustal evolution. Proterozoic mafic dyke swarms of three major periods (2.4, 2.0–2.2 and 1.6 Ga) occur around Tiptur
and Hunsur. The dykes also conform to the regional metamorphic gradient, with greenschist facies in the north and granulite
facies in the south, resulting from the tilt of the craton towards north, exposing progressively deeper crustal levels towards
the south. The low-grade terrain in the north does not have recognizable swarms, but the Tiptur swarm consists essentially
of amphibolites and Hunsur swarm mainly of basic granulites, all of them preserving cross-cutting relations with host rocks,
chilled margins and relict igneous textures. There are also younger dolerite dykes scattered throughout the craton that are
unaffected by this metamorphic zonation. Large-scale geochemical, geochronological and palaeomagnetic data acquisition through
state-of-the-art instrumentation is urgently needed in the Dharwar craton to catch up with contemporary advancements in the
classical greenstone terrains of the world. 相似文献
8.
Stromatolites associated with cherty dolomites of the Vanivilaspura Formation of the Archaean Dharwar Supergroup show a morphology
indicative of the deposition of the latter in a intertidal to subtidal environment. The cherts are moderately high in their
Al/Al + Fe ratios but depleted in Fe2C3 and also most trace elements. Unlike most other Archaean cherts, the Vanivilaspur cherts exhibit significant negative Ce
anomaly, which is interpreted to have resulted from contemporary manganese deposition. The Rb/Sr ratios in the cherts show
a sufficient spread to define a linear correlation line in the Rb-Sr evolution diagram corresponding to an age of 2512 ± 159
Ma and initial Sr ratio of 0.7128 ± 0.0012 (2σ). While this age is strikingly close to that of regional metamorphism in the
Dharwar craton, the initial ratio is distinctly higher than that of the associated volcanics. Acid leaching experiments on
the cherts suggest that they may have been isotopically equilibrated on a mm to cm scale about 500 Ma later than the time
of regional metamorphism. 相似文献
9.
T. C. Devaraju R. P. Viljoen R. H. Sawkar T. L. Sudhakara 《Journal of the Geological Society of India》2009,73(1):73-100
Evidence of mafic and ultramafic magmatism exists in many parts of the Dharwar craton which is divided into two blocks, the
West Dharwar Craton (WDC) and the East Dharwar Craton (EDC). The mafic-ultramafic rocks occur in supracrustal/greenstone belts
and in numerous enclaves and slivers in the WDC. The oldest recorded maficultramafic rocks, which are mainly komatiitic in
nature, are preserved in the Sargur Group which is more than 3.3–3.4 Ga old, the youngest being manifested by 63–76 Ma old
mafic dyke magmatism, possibly related to Deccan volcanism.
In the Sargur Group, ultramafics rocks greatly dominate over mafic lithological units. Both extrusive and intrusive varieties,
the latter in the form of differentiated layered complexes, occur. Mafic volcanics exists in all the greenstone belts of the
eastern block and in the Bababudan and Western Ghats belts of the western block. In addition to the Sargur Group where stratigraphic
sequences are unclear, mafic magmatism is recorded in three different formations of the Bababudan Group and two sub-divisions
of the Shimoga and Chitradurga Groups where basaltic flows are conspicuous. In the well studied greenstone belts of Kolar
and Hutti in the EDC, three to four different Formations of mafic volcanic rocks have been mapped. Isotopic dating has indicated
that while mafic magmatism in the greenstone belts of the EDC covers only a short time span of between 2.65 to 2.75 Ga, those
in the Dharwar Supergroup of the WDC cover a much longer time span from 3.35 to 2.5 Ga.
Mafic dyke magmatism has taken place repeatedly from 2.45 Ga to about 1.0 Ga, but, the peak of emplacement was between 1.8
and 1.4 Ga when the densely developed swarms on the western and south western portions of the Cuddapah Basin and in the central
part of Karnataka, were intruded. Emplacement of potassic ultramafic magma in the form of kimberlite-lamproite which is confined
to the EDC, is a later magmatic event that took place between 1.4 Ga and 0.8 Ga.
From a mineralization perspective, mafic magmatism of the supracrustal groups of the WDC and the greenstone belts of the EDC
are the most important. V-Ti-magnetite bands constitute the most common deposit type recorded in the mafic-ultramafic complexes of the Sargur Group with commercially
exploitable chromite deposits occurring in a number of belts. PGE mineralization of possible commercial value has so far been recorded in a single mafic-ultramafic complex, while copper-nickel mineralization occurs at certain localities in the Sargur and Chitradurga Groups. Gold mineralization hosted by mafic (occasionally ultramafic) rocks has been noted in many of the old workings located in supracrustal
groups of rocks in the WDC and in the greenstone belts of EDC. Economically exploitable mineralization, however, occurs mainly
in the greenstone belts of the Kolar, Ramagiri-Penkacherla and Hutti-Maski and along the eastern margin of the Chitradurga
belt, where it is associated with a major N-S striking thrust zone separating the WDC from the EDC. Gold deposits of the eastern
greenstone belts are comparable to those of the younger greenstone belts of Canada, Zimbabwe and Australia where the mineralization
is associated with quartz carbonate veins often in iron-rich metabasic rocks. The gold was emplaced as hydrothermal fluids,
derived from early komatiitic and tholeiitic magmas, and injected into suitable dilatent structures.
The other common type of mineralization associated with the ultramafic rocks of the Sargur Group and supracrustal belts, particularly
of the WDC, are asbestos and soapstone, related to autometamorphism/metasomatism. Ruby/sapphire deposits occur in places at the contacts of ultramafic rocks with the Peninsular Gneiss, and are related to contact metamorphism
and metasomatism. Mineable magnesite deposits related to low-temperature hydrothermal/lateritic alteration exist in the zone of weathering, particularly in the
more olivine-rich rocks. Recent spurt in diamond exploration is offering promise of discovering economically workable diamondiferous
kimberlite/lamproite intrusions in the EDC. 相似文献
10.
The Dharwar Craton is a composite Archean cratonic collage that preserves important records of crustal evolution on the early Earth. Here we present results from a multidisciplinary study involving field investigations, petrology, zircon SHRIMP U–Pb geochronology with in-situ Hf isotope analyses, and whole-rock geochemistry, including Nd isotope data on migmatitic TTG (tonalite-trondhjemite-granodiorite) gneisses, dark grey banded gneisses, calc-alkaline and anatectic granitoids, together with synplutonic mafic dykes along a wide Northwest – Southeast corridor forming a wide time window in the Central and Eastern blocks of the Dharwar Craton. The dark grey banded gneisses are transitional between TTGs and calc-alkaline granitoids, and are referred to as ‘transitional TTGs’, whereas the calc-alkaline granitoids show sanukitoid affinity. Our zircon U–Pb data, together with published results, reveal four major periods of crustal growth (ca. 3360-3200 Ma, 3000-2960 Ma, 2700-2600 Ma and 2570-2520 Ma) in this region. The first two periods correspond to TTG generation and accretion that is confined to the western part of the corridor, whereas widespread 2670-2600 Ma transitional TTG, together with a major outburst of 2570–2520 Ma juvenile calc-alkaline magmatism of sanukitoid affinity contributed to peak continental growth. The transitional TTGs were preceded by greenstone volcanism between 2746 Ma and 2700 Ma, whereas the calc-alkaline magmatism was contemporaneous with 2570–2545 Ma felsic volcanism. The terminal stage of all four major accretion events was marked by thermal events reflected by amphibolite to granulite facies metamorphism at ca. 3200 Ma, 2960 Ma, 2620 Ma and 2520 Ma. Elemental ratios [(La/Yb)N, Sr/Y, Nb/Ta, Hf/Sm)] and Hf-Nd isotope data suggest that the magmatic protoliths of the TTGs emplaced at different time periods formed by melting of thickened oceanic arc crust at different depths with plagioclase + amphibole ± garnet + titanite/ilmenite in the source residue, whereas the elemental (Ba–Sr, [(La/Yb)N, Sr/Y, Nb/Ta, Hf/Sm)] and Hf-Nd isotope data [εHf(T) = −0.67 to 5.61; εNd(T) = 0.52 to 4.23; ] of the transitional TTGs suggest that their protoliths formed by melting of composite sources involving mantle and overlying arc crust with amphibole + garnet + clinopyroxene ± plagioclase + ilmenite in the residue. The highly incompatible and compatible element contents (REE, K–Ba–Sr, Mg, Ni, Cr), together with Hf and Nd isotope data [εHf(T) = 4.5 to −3.2; εNd(T) = 1.93 to −1.26; ], of the sanukitoids and synplutonic dykes suggest their derivation from enriched mantle reservoirs with minor crustal contamination. Field, elemental and isotope data [εHf(T) = −4.3 to −15.0; εNd(T) = −0.5 to −7.0] of the anatectic granites suggest their derivation through reworking of ancient as well as newly formed juvenile crust. Secular increase in incompatible as well as compatible element contents in the transitional TTGs to sanukitoids imply progressive enrichment of Neoarchean mantle reservoirs, possibly through melting of continent-derived detritus in a subduction zone setting, resulting in the establishment of a sizable continental mass by 2700 Ma, which in turn is linked to the evolving Earth. The Neoarchean geodynamic evolution is attributed to westward convergence of hot oceanic lithosphere, with continued convergence resulted in the assembly of micro-blocks, with eventual slab break-off leading to asthenosphere upwelling caused extensive mantle melting and hot juvenile magma additions to the crust. This led to lateral flow of hot ductile crust and 3D mass distribution and formation of an orogenic plateaux with subdued topography, as indicated by strain fabric data and strong seismic reflectivity along an E-W crustal profile in the Central and Eastern blocks of the Dharwar Craton. 相似文献
11.
Uniformity in sulfur isotope composition in the orogenic gold deposits from the Dharwar Craton,southern India 总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1
The sulfur isotope composition of sulfides (mainly pyrite and arsenopyrite) from gold deposits/prospects of the Dharwar Craton
such as Hutti, Hira-Buddini, Uti, Kolar (Chigargunta), Ajjanahalli, and Jonnagiri has a narrow range (δ34S = +1.1 to +7.1‰). Such craton-scale uniformity of the above gold camps is noteworthy, in spite of the wide diversity in
host rock compositions and their metamorphic conditions, and suggests a magmatic or average crustal source of sulfur for all
deposits studied. In addition, our study points towards gold precipitation from reduced ore fluids, with near-homogeneous
sulfur isotope compositions. 相似文献
12.
13.
Gold mineralization at Hutti is confined to a series of nine parallel, N–S to NNW–SSE trending, steeply dipping shear zones.
The host rocks are amphibolites and meta-rhyolites metamorphosed at peak conditions of 660±40°C and 4±1 kbar. They are weakly
foliated (S1) and contain barren quartz extension veins. The auriferous shear zones (reefs) are typically characterized by four alteration
assemblages and laminated quartz veins, which, in places, occupy the entire reef width of 2–10 m, and contain the bulk of
gold mineralization. A <1.5 m wide distal chlorite-sericite (+biotite, calcite, plagioclase) alteration zone can be distinguished
from a 3–5 m wide proximal biotite-plagioclase (+quartz, muscovite, calcite) alteration zone. Gold is both spatially and temporally
associated with disseminated arsenopyrite and pyrite mineralization. An inner chlorite-K-feldspar (+quartz, calcite, scheelite,
tourmaline, sphene, epidote, sericite) alteration halo, which rims the laminated quartz veins, is characterized by a pyrrhotite,
chalcopyrite, sphalerite, ilmenite, rutile, and gold paragenesis. The distal chlorite-sericite and proximal biotite-plagioclase
alteration assemblages are developed in microlithons of the S2–S3 crenulation cleavage and are replaced along S3 by the inner chlorite-K-feldspar alteration, indicating a two-stage evolution for gold mineralization. Ductile D2 shearing, alteration, and gold mineralization formed the reefs during retrograde evolution and fluid infiltration under upper
greenschist to lower amphibolite facies conditions (560±60°C, 2±1 kbar). The reefs were reactivated in the D3 dextral strike-slip to oblique-slip environment by fault-valve behavior at lower greenschist facies conditions (ca. 300–350°C),
which formed the auriferous laminated quartz veins. Later D4 crosscutting veins and D5 faults overprint the gold mineralization. The alteration mineralogy and the structural control of the deposit clearly points
to an orogenic style of gold mineralization, which took place either during isobaric cooling or at different levels of the
Archean crust. From overlaps in the tectono-metamorphic history, it is concluded that gold mineralization occurred during
two tectonic events, affecting the eastern Dharwar craton in south India between ca. 2550 – 2530 Ma: (1) The assemblage of
various terranes of the eastern block, and (2) a tectono-magmatic event, which caused late- to posttectonic plutonism and
a thermal perturbation. It differs, however, from the pre-peak metamorphic gold mineralization at Kolar and the single-stage
mineralization at Ramagiri. Notably, greenschist facies gold mineralization occurred at Hutti 35–90 million years later than
in the western Dharwar craton.
Editorial handling: G. Beaudoin 相似文献
14.
Geological setting and chemistry of kimberlite clan rocks in the Dharwar Craton, India 总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2
Diamond exploration in India over the past decade has led to the discovery of over 80 kimberlite-inferred and lamproite-related intrusions in three of the four major Archean cratons that dominate the subcontinent. These intrusions are Proterozoic (1.1 Ga), and are structurally controlled: locally (at the intersections of faults); regionally (in a 200 km wide, 1000 km long diamond corridor); and globally (in the reconstructed supercontinent of Rodinia). The geochemistry of 57 samples from 13 intrusions in the southern Dharwar Craton of Andhra Pradesh has been determined by XRF spectrometry. The bodies are iron-rich with mg#=50–70 and are neither archetypal kimberlites nor ideal lamproites; this may be the underlying reason that conventional exploration techniques have thus far failed to locate the primary sources of India's historically famous diamonds. The two major fields of kimberlite-clan rocks (KCR) in the Dharwar Craton, Wajrakur and Narayanpet, are separated by a NW–SE trending, transcontinental (Mumbai-Chennai) gravity lineament. About 80% of intrusions in Wajrakur are diamondiferous, but diamonds have not yet been reported in Narayanpet. The gravity anomaly may mark the boundary of an architectural modification in the keel of the sub-continental lithosphere, a suggestion that is supported by differences in kimberlite mineralogy, chemistry, mantle xenoliths, structural setting and crustal host rocks. 相似文献
15.
Gold mineralization at Jonnagiri, Dharwar Craton, southern India, is hosted in laminated quartz veins within sheared granodiorite that occur with other rock units, typical of Archean greenstone–granite ensembles. The proximal alteration assemblage comprises of muscovite, plagioclase, and chlorite with minor biotite (and carbonate), which is distinctive of low- to mid-greenschist facies. The laminated quartz veins that constitute the inner alteration zone, contain muscovite, chlorite, albite and calcite. Using various calibrations, chlorite compositions in the inner and proximal zones yielded comparable temperature ranges of 263 to 323 °C and 268 to 324 °C, respectively. Gold occurs in the laminated quartz veins both as free-milling native metal and enclosed within sulfides. Fluid inclusion microthermometry and Raman spectroscopy in quartz veins within the sheared granodiorite in the proximal zone and laminated auriferous quartz veins in inner zone reveal the existence of a metamorphogenic aqueous–gaseous (H2O–CO2–CH4 + salt) fluid that underwent phase separation and gave rise to gaseous (CO2–CH4), low saline (~ 5 wt.% NaCl equiv.) aqueous fluids. Quartz veins within the mylonitized granodiorites and the laminated veins show broad similarity in fluid compositions and P–T regime. Although the estimated P–T range (1.39 to 2.57 kbar at 263 to 323 °C) compare well with the published P–T values of other orogenic gold deposits in general, considerable pressure fluctuation characterize gold mineralization at Jonnagiri. Factors such as fluid phase separation and fluid–rock interaction, along with a decrease in f(O2), were collectively responsible for gold precipitation, from an initial low-saline metamorphogenic fluid. Comparison of the Jonnagiri ore fluid with other lode gold deposits in the Dharwar Craton and major granitoid-hosted gold deposits in Australia and Canada confirms that fluids of low saline aqueous–carbonic composition with metamorphic parentage played the most dominant role in the formation of the Archean lode gold systems. 相似文献
16.
印度铁矿储量约占全球的7%,矿石类型以前寒武纪BIF铁矿为主,其中产于绿岩带以及绿片岩相岩石中的BIF型铁矿是印度最重要的铁矿类型。南印度地盾达尔瓦尔克拉通发育众多绿岩带,绿岩带中发育大规模BIF铁矿,BIF铁矿属于不同的地层序列,有不同的岩石组合关系。笔者对吉德勒杜尔加绿岩带和库斯赫塔吉绿岩带BIF地球化学分析表明,根据Al2O3含量,BIF分为页岩BIF(Al2O3≥2%)和石英岩BIF(Al2O3≤2%),BIF呈石英氧化物相,碳酸盐相和硫化物相BIF主量和微量元素表明BIF为陆源碎屑沉积和火山碎屑沉积共同作用形成;稀土元素表明BIF铁矿呈Ce负异常和Eu正异常。达尔瓦尔克拉通测年数据表明,经过2.7~2.65 Ga和2.58~2.54 Ga两期主要的火山作用,2.7~2.6 Ga和2.58~2.52 Ga 2个阶段的大陆增生作用,形成了达尔瓦尔克拉通和绿岩带。BIF成矿来源上,AMOR的高温热液提供大量的Fe和SiO2,海洋中生物光合作用提供了O2,在化学沉积和碎屑沉积共同作用下,形成了BIF铁矿。 相似文献
17.
The Kalyadi polymetallic copper deposit occurs within the Middle Archaean (≥3.0 Ga), medium-grade Kalyadi schist belt which
consists predominantly of ultramafic-mafic schists interbedded with chemogenic chert, detrital high Al-Mg schists and siliceous
schists. This sedimentary exhalative type (SEDEX type) ore-body is the only copper deposit hosted in cherts in the western
Dharwar craton. The Kalyadi supracrustal rocks are intruded by tonalite-trondhjemitic gneisses (ca. 3.0 Ga) and granite (ca.
2.6 Ga). The Kalyadi copper deposit is polygenetic in nature. The primary ores represented by disseminations of pyrite ± linneite
and chalcopyrite ± magnetite essentially along the bedding lamination of the metachert are referred to as the metamorphosed
chert-sulphide rhythmites of a primary stratiform type. The ore is of low-grade and records imprints of at least two events
of deformation. Pyrite is characterised by high-Co values (262–4524 ppm) and high–Co/Ni ratios (3.0–19.7). Rare earth element
patterns of the primary ores and the host metacherts are identical, characterised by La enrichment, absence of Eu anomalies
and flat to depleted HREE patterns with δ
34 S = −0.8‰. The secondary (remobilised) ores are structurally controlled occurring as veins and stringers discordant to the
bedding lamination or schistosity. The constituent ores are chalcopyrite-pyrite-pyrrhotite with minor pentlandite. These sulphides
with low-Co/Ni ratios (0.87–1.80), have either a strong positive or negative Eu anomaly and show slight HREE enrichment. The
δ
34 S value ranges from +2.64 to −4.29‰. It is interpreted that the primary stratiform ores and the cherts were derived from
volcanogenic hydrothermal fluids as syngenetic/chemical deposits in a deep sea environment. The secondary epigenetic mineralisation
is related to subsequent migmatisation, deformational events and granitic activity.
Received: 8 September 1995 / Accepted: 18 November 1996 相似文献
18.
通过对个旧高松矿田的构造地质调查、区域成矿构造背景研究和以往勘探资料系统整理和分析,初步厘定了个旧高松矿田成矿构造系统,并将其解析为印支中晚期—燕山早期近EW向成矿构造子系统、燕山中晚期NE向成矿构造子系统、喜山早-中期岩溶成矿构造子系统。近EW向成矿构造子系统控制区内有利含矿岩系空间分布,含矿岩系的层序构造是层间氧化矿重要的控矿因素;NE向成矿构造子系统控制矿田内燕山晚期花岗岩的侵入就位及层间氧化矿和接触带矿的产出;喜山早-中期岩溶成矿构造子系统控制岩溶残坡积型和溶洞沉积型砂锡矿的形成。EW向与NE向构造交接复合,形成了向断凹式、羽列式、背突式、断裂-接触带构造式等复合控矿构造样式。此外,构造也控制了矿体的产状。根据这些控矿规律,可有效地进行找矿预测。 相似文献
19.
《地学前缘(英文版)》2023,14(4):101581
Coupled paleomagnetic and geochronologic data derived from mafic dykes provide valuable records of continental movement. To reconstruct the Proterozoic paleogeographic history of Peninsular India, we report paleomagnetic directions and U-Pb zircon ages from twenty-nine mafic dykes in the Eastern Dharwar Craton near Hyderabad. Paleomagnetic analysis yielded clusters of directional data that correspond to dyke swarms at 2.37 Ga, 2.22 Ga, 2.08 Ga, 1.89–1.86 Ga, 1.79 Ga, and a previously undated dual polarity magnetization. We report new positive baked contact tests for the 2.08 Ga swarm and the 1.89–1.86 Ga swarm(s), and a new inverse baked contact test for the 2.08 Ga swarm. Our results promote the 2.08 Ga Dharwar Craton paleomagnetic pole (43.1° N, 184.5° E; A95 = 4.3°) to a reliability score of R = 7 and suggest a position for the Dharwar Craton at 1.79 Ga based on a virtual geomagnetic pole (VGP) at 33.0° N, 347.5° E (a95 = 16.9°, k = 221, N = 2). The new VGP for the Dharwar Craton provides support for the union of the Dharwar, Singhbhum, and Bastar Cratons in the Southern India Block by at least 1.79 Ga. Combined new and published northeast-southwest moderate-steep dual polarity directions from Dharwar Craton dykes define a new paleomagnetic pole at 20.6° N, 233.1° E (A95 = 9.2°, N = 18; R = 5). Two dykes from this group yielded 1.05–1.01 Ga 207Pb/206Pb zircon ages and this range is taken as the age of the new paleomagnetic pole. A comparison of the previously published poles with our new 1.05–1.01 Ga pole shows India shifting from equatorial to higher (southerly) latitudes from 1.08 Ga to 1.01 Ga as a component of Rodinia. 相似文献
20.
Dilip K. Mukhopadhyay 《Journal of Earth System Science》1990,99(2):201-213
In the Kolar Schist Belt well-preserved small-scale diastrophic structures suggest four phases of folding (F1 — F4). The near coaxial F1 andF
2folds are both isoclinal with long-drawn out limbs and sharp hinges. The axial planes of bothF
1andF
2folds are subvertical with N-S strikes; these control the linear outcrop pattern of the Schist belt. The later folds (F
3and F4) are important in small-to-intermediate scales only and are accommodation structures formed during the relaxation period
of the early folding episodes. Mesoscopic shear zones, post-F2 but pre-F3 in age, are present in all the rock types in this area. The F1 and F2 folds and the mesoscopic shear zones were formed during a continuous E-W subhorizontal compression. Available geochemical
and isotopic data show that the Kolar Schist Belt with ensimatic setting is bounded by two granitic terrains of contrasting
evolutionary histories. This, together with E-W subhorizontal compression over a protracted period of time, strengthens the
recent suggestions that the Kolar Schist Belt represents a suture. This belt then marks the site of a continent-continent
collision event of late Archaean-early Proterozoic age. 相似文献