U–Pb evidence of late Archean tectono-thermal activity in the southern São Francisco shield, Brazil

1992 ◽  
Vol 29 (11) ◽  
pp. 2341-2346 ◽  
Author(s):  
N. Machado ◽  
M. Carneiro

The São Francisco craton in eastern Brazil is one of the major shield areas in South America. In the Quadrilátero Ferrífero area (southern sector of the craton) the Archean Rio das Velhas greenstone belt is surrounded by granite–gneiss terrane and is overlain by Proterozoic sedimentary successions. The Bonfim Metamorphic Complex is the only area of the granite–gneiss terrane adjacent to the greenstone belt that has been mapped. It comprises two gneissic units, tonalites, and late granitic dykes, which crosscut the regional north–south shear fabric. Samples of gneiss, two tonalites and a granitic dyke were dated by U–Pb. A zircon core from the Alberto Flores gneiss yielded a minimum age of 2920 Ma, whereas the overgrowth is concordant at 2772 ± 6 Ma. Two tonalites from the vicinity of Serra da Moeda are [Formula: see text] old, and a late dyke yielded an age of [Formula: see text]. These data, together with previously published U–Pb ages, show that (i) greenstone belt volcanism was coeval with granitoid intrusion and with metamorphism of older units in the granite–gneiss terrane at ca. 2780 Ma and (ii) the main crust-forming event in the Quadrilátero Ferrífero area is about 2780 Ma old. Clear evidence is now available indicating that older magmatism is 2.8–3.2 Ga old. In addition, the last Archean deformation must have occurred in the interval 2780–2703 Ma. Finally, the presence of 2774 ± 6 Ma titanite in the tonalites indicates that the metamorphism associated with the Trans-Amazonian orogeny (ca. 2.0 Ga) did not reach amphibolite facies in the study area.

Author(s):  
Jo&#227o A. N. Batista ◽  
Pablo B. Meyer ◽  
Gabriela Cruz-Lustre ◽  
Antonio L. V. Toscano de Brito

Habenaria longissima, a new species from the H. nuda species complex, is described and illustrated. It is remarkable for the exceptionally long lateral segments of the petals and labellum, which are the longest among Neotropical Habenaria, both in absolute and inproportional terms. Despite the morphological similarity, Bayesian and parsimony phylogenetic analyses based on nuclear (ITS) and plastid DNA markers (matK), revealed that H. longissima is distantly related to other species of the complex, and constitutes an independent lineage. Its distribution is unusual in that it is the only species of Orchidaceae restricted to the Quadrilátero Ferrífero in the State of Minas Gerais and to Chapada Diamantina, in the central part of the Espinhaço range in the State of Bahia, with the populations 1000 km from each other. Habenaria longissima is a rare species, known only from three localities and four populations and informally proposed as Endangered due to the small area of occupancy and small number of known populations.


Author(s):  
Alexandre de Amorim Teixeira ◽  
Adalene Moreira Silva ◽  
Augusto César Bittencourt Pires ◽  
Roberto Alexandre Vitória de Moraes ◽  
Carlos Roberto de Souza Filho

2016 ◽  
Vol 29 (18) ◽  
pp. 6751-6763 ◽  
Author(s):  
Verónica Martín-Gómez ◽  
Emilio Hernández-Garcia ◽  
Marcelo Barreiro ◽  
Cristóbal López

Abstract Sea surface temperature (SST) anomalies over the tropical oceans are able to generate extratropical atmospheric circulation anomalies that can induce rainfall variability and changes in the sources of moisture. The work reported here evaluates the interdecadal changes in the moisture sources for southeastern South America (SESA) during austral summer, and it is divided into two complementary parts. In the first part the authors construct a climate network to detect synchronization periods among the tropical oceans and the precipitation over SESA. Afterward, taking into account these results, the authors select two periods with different degrees of synchronization to compare the spatial distribution of the SESA moisture sources. Results show that during the last century there were three synchronization periods among the tropical oceans and the precipitation over SESA (during the 1930s, 1970s, and 1990s) and suggest that the main moisture sources of SESA are the recycling over the region, the central-eastern shore of Brazil together with the surrounding Atlantic Ocean, and the southwestern South Atlantic surrounding the SESA domain. Comparison of SESA moisture sources for the 1980s (a period of nonsignificant synchronization) and the 1990s (a synchronized period) shows that the principal differences are in the intensity of the recycling and in the strength of the central-eastern shore of Brazil. Moreover, the authors find that a region centered at (20°S, 300°E) is a moisture source for SESA only during the 1990s. These differences can be associated with the development of a low-level anticyclonic (cyclonic) anomaly circulation over central-eastern Brazil that favors the transport of moisture from central Brazil (central-eastern shore of Brazil) toward SESA in the 1990s (1980s).


1998 ◽  
Vol 11 (4) ◽  
pp. 287 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ghillean T. Prance ◽  
Vanessa Plana

The American Proteaceae are outliers from the main centres of diversity of the family in Australia and South Africa. There are about 83 species in eight genera which all belong to the monophyletic subfamily Grevilleoideae. Three genera, Embothrium, Oreocallis and Lomatia, are placed in the tribe Embothrieae (sensu Johnson and Briggs), four Euplassa, Gevuina, Panopsis and Roupala in the Macadamieae and the single genus Orites in the Oriteae. There are five genera endemic to America and three also have species in Australia and New Guinea (Gevuina, Lomatia and Orites). The Proteaceae appear to have arrived in South America via two routes. The larger genera Euplassa, Panopsis and Roupala, which are all endemic to America and have a general distribution in northern South America and south-eastern Brazil, are derived from Gondwanaland before it separated from South America. The remaining genera are distributed either in temperate South America or in the high Andes and appear to have arrived more recently via the Australia–Antarctica–South American connection. Three of these genera have species in both regions. The centres of species diversity of Euplassa, Panopsis and Roupala fall outside hypothesised forest refugia, indicating that they are not true rainforest species but species of seasonal habitats like those achieved at higher altitudes where they are commonly found. Two genera,Panopsis and Roupala, have reached Central America after the central American land bridge was formed six million years ago. The exact relationship to genera on other continents is still unclear and there is a need for a cladistic biogeographic analysis of the group based on both morphological and molecular data.


2016 ◽  
Vol 72 ◽  
pp. 963-988 ◽  
Author(s):  
Breno de Souza Martins ◽  
Lydia Maria Lobato ◽  
Carlos Alberto Rosière ◽  
Steffen G. Hagemann ◽  
João Orestes Schneider Santos ◽  
...  

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