Evolution of the Mayo Kebbi region as revealed by zircon dating: An early (ca. 740Ma) Pan-African magmatic arc in southwestern Chad

2006 ◽  
Vol 44 (4-5) ◽  
pp. 530-542 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joseph Penaye ◽  
Alfred Kröner ◽  
Sadrack F. Toteu ◽  
William R. Van Schmus ◽  
Jean-Claude Doumnang
2019 ◽  
Vol 60 (8) ◽  
pp. 1543-1574 ◽  
Author(s):  
Eszter Badenszki ◽  
J Stephen Daly ◽  
Martin J Whitehouse ◽  
Andreas Kronz ◽  
Brian G J Upton ◽  
...  

Abstract Deep crustal felsic xenoliths from classic Scottish Midland Valley localities, carried to the surface by Permo-Carboniferous magmatism, are shown for the first time to include metaigneous varieties with dioritic and tonalitic protoliths. Four hypotheses regarding their origin have been evaluated: (1) Precambrian basement; (2) Permo-Carboniferous underplating; (3) ‘Newer Granite’ magmatism; (4) Ordovician arc magmatism. U–Pb zircon dating results rule out the Precambrian basement and Permo-Carboniferous underplating hypotheses, but establish that the meta-igneous xenoliths represent both ‘Newer Granite’ and Ordovician (to possibly Silurian) arc magmatism. The metadiorite xenoliths are shown to have protolith ages of c. 415 Ma with εHft zircon values ranging from +0·1 to +11·1. These are interpreted to represent unexposed ‘Newer Granite’ plutons, based on age, mineralogical, isotopic and geochemical data. This shows that Devonian ‘Newer Granite’ magmatism had a greater impact on the Midland Valley and Southern Uplands crust than previously realized. Clinopyroxene–plagioclase–quartz barometry on the metadiorites from the east and west of the Midland Valley yielded a similar pressure range of c. 5–10 kbar, and a metadiorite from the east yielded a minimum two-feldspar temperature estimate of c. 793–816°C. These results indicate that the metadiorites once resided in the middle–lower crust. In contrast, two metatonalite xenoliths have a Late Ordovician protolith age (c. 453 Ma), with zircon εHft values of +7·8 to +9·0. These are interpreted as samples of a buried Late Ordovician magmatic arc situated within the Midland Valley. Inherited zircons with similar Late Ordovician ages and εHft=453 values (+1·6 to +10·8) are present in the metadiorites, suggesting that the Devonian ‘Newer Granites’ intruded within or through this Late Ordovician Midland Valley arc. A younger protolith age of c. 430 Ma from one of the metatonalites suggests that arc activity continued until Silurian times. This validates the long-standing ‘arc collision’ hypothesis for the development of the Caledonian Orogen. Based on U–Pb zircon dating, the metatonalite and metadiorite xenoliths have both experienced metamorphism between c. 400 and c. 391 Ma, probably linked to the Acadian Orogeny. An older phase of metamorphism at c. 411 Ma was possibly triggered by the combined effects of heating owing to the emplacement of the ‘Newer Granite’ plutons and the overthrusting of the Southern Uplands terrane onto the southern margin of the Midland Valley terrane.


1989 ◽  
Vol 26 (6) ◽  
pp. 1136-1146 ◽  
Author(s):  
Renaud Caby ◽  
Uranie Andreopoulos-Renaud ◽  
Christian Pin

The Tilemsi magmatic arc, preserved along the suture zone of the pan-African trans-Saharan belt of northern Mali, crops out as a series of northeast- to north-northeast-trending strips along the Tilemsi Mesozoic trough and is about 100 km in width. The volcanic arc series includes pillowed metabasalts of tholeiitic character and associated with rhyodacites. Overlying sedimentary rocks are turbiditic volcanic greywackes. They are progressively recrystallized into grey gneiss in the vicinity of gabbro-noritic and dioritic intrusions. U/Pb zircon dating of a crosscutting metaquartz diorite gives a nearly concordant age of [Formula: see text], while that of a plagiogranite mobilizate associated with the grey gneiss is [Formula: see text]. Initial Nd and Sr isotopic compositions of two metaquartz diorites (εNd730 = +6.6, +6.3; (87Sr/86Sr)i = 0.7024) are in a agreement with a depleted mantle source similar to modern intraoceanic arcs. Isotopic compositions of two Tilemsi metagreywackes (εNd730 = +5.8, +4.3; 87Sr/86Sr ≈ 0.7027) exclude any significant derivation from an older sialic source and support the ensimatic origin of the magmatic arc. A U/Pb zircon age of 635 ± 5 Ma has also been obtained on a pretectonic granodiorite batholith at the eastern margin of the arc. Isotopic composition of this intrusion (εNdi = −6.0, −6.4; (87Sr/86Sr)i = 0.7046) illustrates the lack of a genetic link between the 730 Ma old, mantle-derived magmas and these granitoids, which originated from a crustal reservoir. This change in magmatic source is interpreted as the result of accretion of the ensimatic arc along the eastern continent, preceding continent–continent collision during the pan-African event.


2015 ◽  
Vol 105 (6) ◽  
pp. 1811-1830 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. Tchameni ◽  
F. Sun ◽  
D. Dawaï ◽  
G. Danra ◽  
L. Tékoum ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  

2021 ◽  
Vol 124 (2) ◽  
pp. 353-382
Author(s):  
M.J. de Wit ◽  
S. Bowring ◽  
R. Buchwaldt ◽  
F.Ö. Dudas ◽  
D. MacPhee ◽  
...  

Abstract In 1964, W.Q. Kennedy suggested that the crust of Saharan Africa is different from the rest of Africa. To date, the geologic evolution of this region remains obscure because the age and composition of crystalline basement are unknown across large sectors of the Sahara. Most of Africa comprises Archaean cratons surrounded by Palaeo- to Mesoproterozoic orogenic belts, which together constitute Africa’s three major shields (the Southern, Central and West African Shields), finally assembled along belts of Pan-African rocks. By contrast, central Saharan Africa (5.3x106 km2), an area just over half the size of Europe, is considered either as a Neoproterozoic region constructed of relatively juvenile crust (0.5 to 1.0 Ga), or as an older (North African) shield that was reactivated and re-stabilized during that time, a period commonly referred to as “Pan African”. Here, using U-Pb zircon age determinations and Nd isotopic data, we show that remote areas in Chad, part of the undated Darfur Plateau stretching across ¾ million km2 of the central Sahara, comprise an extensive Neoproterozoic crystalline basement of pre-tectonic gabbro-tonalite-granodiorite and predominantly post-tectonic alkali feldspar granites and syenites that intruded between ca. 550 to 1050 Ma. This basement is flanked along its western margin by a Neoproterozoic continental calc-alkaline magmatic arc coupled to a cryptic suture zone that can be traced for ~2400 km from Tibesti through western Darfur into Cameroon. We refer to this as the Central Saharan Belt. This, in a Gondwana framework, is part of a greater arc structure, which we here term the Great Central Gondwana Arc (GCGA). Inherited zircons and Nd isotopic ratios indicate the Neoproterozoic magmas in the central Sahara were predominantly derived from Mesoproterozoic continental lithosphere. Regional deformation between 613 to 623 Ma marks the onset of late alkaline granite magmatism that was widespread across a much larger area of North Africa until about 550 Ma. During this magmatism, the region was exhumed and eroded, leaving a regional peneplain on which early Palaeozoic (Lower-Middle Cambrian) siliciclastic sediments were subsequently deposited, as part of a thick and widespread cover that stretched across much of North Africa and the Arabian Peninsula. Detrital zircons in these cover sequences provide evidence that a substantial volume of detritus was derived from the central Sahara region, because these sequences include ‘Kibaran-age’ zircons (ca. 1000 Ma) for which a source terrain has hitherto been lacking. We propose that, in preference to calling the central Sahara a “ghost” or “meta” craton, it should be called the Central Sahara Shield.


2020 ◽  
Vol 81 (1) ◽  
pp. 41-66
Author(s):  
Darko Spahic ◽  
Tivadar Gaudenyi

The study represents a summary of the hitherto tectonic concepts revolving around a peri-Gondwanan fragment referred to as the Serbo- Macedonian Unit. The Serbo-Macedonian Unit as a gneiss-dominated basement segment is positioned in the proximity of the Baltican craton (peri-Moesian realm). This area represents a repository of the transferred broadly similar thus highly complex, elongated polycrystalline vestiges of the Pan-African inheritance. This peculiar far-travelled composite crustal fragment of north Gondwana is amalgamated on top of the Supragetic unit during the late Variscan peri-Moesian amalgamation. However, the original early Pa - leozoic tectonostratigraphic configuration of these three intimate green schistand medium- to high-grade gneiss-amphibolite basement vestiges (Serbo-Ma - cedonian/Supragetic and Getic) is further perplexed by the presence of poorly documented pre-Variscan (Ordovician?) lithospheric-scale event. The Pan-African to Lower Paleozoic subduction/magmatic arc stage led to the amalgamation, breakup and dispersal of a cluster of peri-Gondwanan continental and oceanic terranes. Breakup and dispersal from the northern shore of the Gondwanan active margin triggered the development of the Paleozoic deep-marine sedimentary cover (?Kucaj unit? or Getic unit). To make matter more complex, prior the Lower Paleozoic terrane agglomeration and sub - sequent dispersal, it appears that a Lower Paleozoic geodynamic linkage is additionally marked by the poorly investigated cross-lithospheric event. This event connects the outboard oceanic Supragetic/?Kucaj? succession with a segment of the former north Gondwanan protobasin (juvenile Serbo-Ma - cedonian Unit).


PROMINE ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 6 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-11
Author(s):  
Retno Anjarwati ◽  
Arifudin Idrus ◽  
Lucas Donny Setijadji

The regional tectonic conditions of the KSK Contract of Work are located in the mid-Tertiary magmatic arc (Carlile and Mitchell, 1994) which host a number of epithermal gold deposits (eg, Kelian, Indon, Muro) and significant prospects such as Muyup, Masupa Ria, Gunung Mas and Mirah. Copper-gold mineralization in the KSK Contract of Work is associated with a number of intrusions that have occupied the shallow-scale crust at the Mesozoic metamorphic intercellular junction to the south and continuously into the Lower Tertiary sediment toward the water. This intrusion is interpreted to be part of the Oligocene arc of Central Kalimantan (in Carlile and Mitchell 1994) Volcanic rocks and associated volcanoes are older than intrusions, possibly aged Cretaceous and exposed together with all three contacts (Carlile and Mitchell, 1994) some researchers contribute details about the geological and mineralogical background, and some papers for that are published for the Beruang Kanan region and beyond but no one can confirm the genesis type of the Beruang Kanan region The mineralization of the Beruang Kanan area is generally composed by high yields of epithermal sulphide mineralization. with Cu-Au mineralization This high epithermal sulphide deposition coats the upper part of the Cu-Au porphyry precipitate associated with mineralization processes that are generally controlled by the structure


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