Dynamic recrystallization mechanisms and vorticity estimation of the Terrane Boundary Shear Zone (Lakhna shear zone): Implications on dynamics of juxtaposition of the Eastern Ghats Mobile Belt with the Bastar Craton, NW Odisha

2020 ◽  
Vol 129 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Bhupesh Meher ◽  
Bhuban Mohan Behera ◽  
Tapas Kumar Biswal
2003 ◽  
Vol 6 (2) ◽  
pp. 215-229 ◽  
Author(s):  
T.R.K. Chetty ◽  
P. Vijay ◽  
B.L. Narayana ◽  
G.V. Giridhar

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Arun Singh ◽  
Chandrani Singh

<p>We present the first high resolution seismic images illuminating the hitherto-elusive crustal architecture beneath the Eastern Ghats Mobile Belt (EGMB) using teleseismic receiver functions. Data were collected using 27 broadband seismic stations operated in a continuous mode covering two distinct seismic profiles (~550 km long) during 2015–2018. Several interesting observations and inferences are made through analysis of the receiver functions such as (a) a very thick crust (>40 km) with oppositely dipping Moho beneath the EGMB and Archean Bastar Craton, (b) EGMB formed from amalgamation of different crustal domains thrust over one another possibly during the Pan-African orogeny, (c) the Archean Bastar Craton crust extends (~75 km) eastward beneath the EGMB, from its surficial geological boundary, (d) there is a sharp contrast in the crustal structure (with ~20 km Moho offset) at the contact between the Rengali Province and Singhbhum Craton which does not support southward growth of the Singhbhum Craton through accretion, (e) anorthosite complexes may possibly be created by rising diapirs channeled through the weak zones in the crust, from the magma chambers developed by melting of frontal portion of the underthrusting lower crust. We report a significant change in the crustal architecture just east of the most elevated topography observed along the profile covering the Bastar Craton and the EGMB. It requires further careful petrological investigations to ascertain the relationship of high elevation and its linkages with the deep crust, forming a separate domain. Our results do not support or discard a Grenvillian age (~1 Ga) docking of the EGMB with Proto-India, though it is preferred to explain the present day crustal features with intense Pan-African (0.5–0.6 Ga) reorganization.</p>


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Padmaja Jayalekshmi ◽  
Tapabrato Sarkar ◽  
Somnath Dasgupta ◽  
Rajneesh Bhutani

<p>The Bastar Craton at the interface of Eastern Ghats Belt (EGB) contains a mélange of rocks from both the Archean cratonic domain and the adjacent Proterozoic mobile belt domain marking a broad shear zone, known as the Terrane Boundary Shear Zone (TBSZ). The TBSZ preserves a very rare occurrence of high-grade metamorphosed Archean cratonic rocks, whose ancestry has been constrained by Nd model ages. This study presents the petrological and geochemical characterization of mafic granulites and orthopyroxene bearing granitoids from the shear zone and its implications on the tectonic evolution of the craton – mobile belt boundary. Detailed petrographic, geothermobarometric and P-T pseudosection studies indicate that the Bastar cratonic rocks underwent high-pressure granulite facies metamorphism along a clockwise P-T path, reaching ~900°C and 9-10 kbar. The originally amphibolite facies rocks, metamorphosed through dehydration-melting of hornblende (mafic rocks) and biotite (felsic rocks), to attain the peak P-T conditions. We suggest that this high-grade metamorphism was due to the subduction/underthrusting of the Bastar Craton beneath the EGB, supported by the available seismic data, which resulted from far-field stress related to the Kuunga orogeny in an intraplate setting.</p>


Author(s):  
J. K. Nanda ◽  
U. C. Pati

While congratulating the authors for the wealth of geochemical data on a very important Precambrian lithological assemblage of India, known commonly as khondalites, which constitute a major part of the Eastern Ghats mobile belt bordering the eastern fringes of the Indian Peninsula, we have a few comments to offer on the hypothesis propounded by the authors (Dash et al. 1987).


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