scholarly journals RE-APPRAISAL OF THE SANTA RITA GREENSTONE BELT STRATIGRAPHY, CENTRAL BRAZIL, BASED ON NEW U-PB SHRIMP AGE AND SM-ND DATA OF FELSIC METAVOLCANIC ROCKS

2000 ◽  
Vol 30 (1) ◽  
pp. 157-160
Author(s):  
MÁRCIO MARTINS PIMENTEL ◽  
HARDY JOST ◽  
RICHARD ARMSTRONG ◽  
REINHARDT ADOLFO FUCK ◽  
SÉRGIO LUIZ JUNGES ◽  
...  
2001 ◽  
Vol 73 (3) ◽  
pp. 445-460 ◽  
Author(s):  
DANIELLE P. FISCHEL ◽  
MÁRCIO M. PIMENTEL ◽  
REINHARDT A. FUCK ◽  
RICHARD ARMSTRONG

U-Pb SHRIMP and Sm-Nd isotopic ages were determined for felsic metavolcanic rocks from the Silvânia Sequence and Jurubatuba Granite in the central part of the Brasília Belt. Zircon grains from a metavolcanic sample yielded 2115 ± 23 Ma and from the granite yielded 2089 ± 14 Ma, interpreted as crystallization ages of these rocks. Six metavolcanic samples of the Silvânia Sequence yielded a six-point whole-rock Sm-Nd isochron indicating a crystallization age of 2262 ± 110 Ma and positive epsilonNd(T) = +3.0 interpreted as a juvenile magmatic event. Nd isotopic analyses on samples from the Jurubatuba Granite have Paleoproterozoic T DM model ages between 2.30 and 2.42 Ga and epsilonNd(T) values vary between -0.22 and -0.58. The oldest T DM value refers to a sedimentary xenolith in the granite. These results suggest crystallization ages of Silvânia volcanics and Jurubatuba Granite are the first evidence of a ca. 2.14-2.08 juvenile magmatic event in the basement of the central part of the Brasília Belt that implies the presence of arc/suture hidden in reworked basement of the Brasília Belt.


1982 ◽  
Vol 19 (12) ◽  
pp. 2258-2275 ◽  
Author(s):  
Léopold Gélinas ◽  
Michel Mellinger ◽  
Pierre Trudel

In a suite of Archean mafic pillows from the Rouyn–Noranda region of Quebec's Abitibi Greenstoné Belt, including both tholeiitic and calc-alkaline varieties spanning the prehnite–pumpellyite to upper greenschist metamorphic facies, three types of alteration can be defined: (I) chlorite–epidote–actinolite; (II) chlorite–epidote; and (III) chlorite ± sericite; the number of mineral phases decreases as a result of progressive hydration from type I to type III alteration. Albitization, resulting from substitution of [Formula: see text], in calcic plagioclase, is highly variable in type I alteration, but in types II and III the plagioclase is totally albitized and in some cases silicified. Chloritization is closely linked to increasing hydration and Ca leaching with MgO and FeO substituting for CaO in ferromagnesian minerals.Calcium was mobilized and carried by solutions, as evidenced by the variable concentration of epidote at the margins of pillows. This calcium leaching generated an excess of Al2O3 with respect to the combined molecular proportions of Na2O, K2O, and CaO, and is shown by the presence of corundum in CIPW norm calculations. In some pillows showing substitution of [Formula: see text], the fo2 of the invading fluid appears to have remained constant, being buffered by the pillow composition; this would be favored by a low water/rock mass ratio. As a result, the initial pillow Fe2O3/FeO ratio remained constant. In other pillows, the fo2 appears to have been imposed by the invading fluid rather than by the mineral assemblage: the FeO/MgO ratios are thus no longer representative of the magmatic composition whereas the ΣFeO/MgO is still representative of the pristine magmatic value.Two types of substitution of CaO by FeO and (or) MgO have been observed: (1) preferential substitution restricted to type I alteration, of FeO over MgO, similar to low-temperature substitution in modern-day sea-floor alteration; and (2) the more common substitution in type II and III alterations in which MgO predominates over FeO, similar to the high-temperature substitution taking place at great depth on the ocean floor.Although the samples were collected to test mineral heterogeneities caused by chemical degradation, more than 40% of the pillows sampled retained their pristine ΣFeO/MgO ratios. The various alteration patterns are independent of the initial tholeiitic or calc-alkaline lineage; this was confirmed using rare earth elements (REE) and inert trace elements such as Zr, Y, and Ti. The chemical changes in the mafic metavolcanic rocks do not obliterate their tholeiitic or calc-alkaline chemical affinities.


1990 ◽  
Vol 27 (4) ◽  
pp. 582-589 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. L. Jackson ◽  
R. H. Sutcliffe

Published U–Pb geochronological, geological, and petrochemical data suggest that there are late Archean ensialic greenstone belts (GB) (Michipicoten GB and possibly the northern Abitibi GB), ensimatic greenstone belts (southern Abitibi GB and Batchawana GB), and possibly a transitional ensimatic–ensialic greenstone belt (Swayze GB) in the central Superior Province. This lateral crustal variability may preclude simple correlation of the Michipicoten GB and its substrata, as exposed in the Kapuskasing Uplift, with that of the southern Abitibi GB. Furthermore, this lateral variability may have determined the locus of the Kapuskasing Uplift. Therefore, although the Kapuskasing Uplift provides a useful general crustal model, alternative models of crustal structure and tectonics for the southern Abitibi GB warrant examination.Thrusting of a juvenile, ensimatic southern Abitibi GB over a terrane containing evolved crust is consistent with (i) the structural style of the southern Abitibi GB; (ii) juvenile southern Abitibi GB metavolcanic rocks intruded by rocks having an isotopically evolved, older component; and (iii) Proterozoic extension that preserved low-grade metavolcanic rocks within the down-dropped Cobalt Embayment, which is bounded by higher grade terranes to the east and west.


1990 ◽  
Vol 27 (5) ◽  
pp. 649-656 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Turek ◽  
R. Keller ◽  
W. R. Van Schmus

The Mishibishu greenstone belt, located 40 km west of Wawa, is a typical Archean greenstone belt and is probably an extension of the Michipicoten belt. This belt is composed of basic to felsic metavolcanic rocks of tholeiitic to calc-alkaline affinity and of metasedimentary rocks ranging from conglomerate to argillite. Granitoids, diorites, and gabbros intrude and embay supracrustal rocks as internal and external plutons.Six U–Pb zircon ages have been obtained on rocks in this area. The oldest is 2721 ± 4 Ma for the Jostle Lake tonalite. The bulk of the volcanic rocks formed by 2696 ± 17 Ma, which is the age of the Chimney Point porphyry at the top of the volcanic pile. The Pilot Harbour granite has a similar age of 2693 ± 7 Ma. The age of the Tee Lake tonalite is 2673 ± 12 Ma, and the age of the Iron. Lake gabbro is 2671 ± 4 Ma. The youngest age for volcanics in this part of the Superior Province is 2677 ± 7 Ma, obtained from, the David Lakes pyroclastic breccia. these ages agree with those reported for the adjacent Michipicoten and Gamitagama belts.


1997 ◽  
Vol 39 (5) ◽  
pp. 449-460 ◽  
Author(s):  
Paulo De Tarso Ferro De Oliveira Fortes ◽  
Alain Cheilletz ◽  
Gaston Giuliani ◽  
Gilbert Féraud

2020 ◽  
Vol 55 (8) ◽  
pp. 1625-1646
Author(s):  
Matthias Mueller ◽  
Petri Peltonen ◽  
Pasi Eilu ◽  
Richard Goldfarb ◽  
Eero Hanski

Abstract The Mustajärvi gold occurrence lies in the southern part of the Paleoproterozoic Central Lapland Greenstone Belt, in proximity to the first-order transcrustal Venejoki thrust fault system. The gold occurrence is structurally controlled by the second-order Mustajärvi shear zone, which is located at the contact between siliciclastic metasedimentary and mafic to ultramafic metavolcanic rocks. The main mineralization comprises a set of parallel veins and sulfidized rocks that are slightly oblique to the shear zone and are hosted by third-order structures likely representing Riedel R-type shears. The gold-mineralized rock at Mustajärvi is associated with pyrite that is present in 0.15- to 1-m-wide quartz-pyrite-tourmaline veins and in zones of massive pyrite in the host rocks with thicknesses ranging from 1.15 to 2 m. In unweathered rock, hypogene gold is hosted by Au- and Au-Bi-telluride micro-inclusions in pyrite, whereas strong weathering at near surface levels has caused a remobilization of gold, resulting in free gold deposited mainly in the cracks of oxidized pyrite. The geochemistry of both mineralization styles is typical of orogenic gold systems with strong enrichments comprising Au, B, Bi, CO2, Te, and Se; and less consistent anomalous amounts of Ag, As, Sb, and W. Unusual for orogenic gold deposits is the strong enrichment of Ni and Co, which leads to the classification of Mustajärvi as orogenic gold occurrence with atypical metal association.


1993 ◽  
Vol 30 (7) ◽  
pp. 1521-1531 ◽  
Author(s):  
David Morin ◽  
Michel Jébrak ◽  
Marc Bardoux ◽  
Normand Goulet

The McWatters metavolcanic rocks are structurally bounded lenses within the Cadillac tectonic zone on the southern boundary of the Abitibi greenstone belt. They comprise komatiite, tholeiitic basalt and gabbro, and calc-alkaline andesitic lavas and volcaniclastic rocks cut by calc-alkaline dioritic and lamprophyric dykes. The McWatters basalts are mid-ocean-ridge basalt type tholeiites exhibiting low incompatible trace element contents and [La/Yb]N < 1. They may have formed via relatively high degree partial melting of a rare-earth element depleted mantle source. The andesites exhibit chondrite-normalized trace-element patterns with light-rare-earth and large-ion lithophile element enrichments and negative Nb and Ti anomalies, comparable to those of subduction-related calc-alkaline andesites. McWatters units are distinct from nearby Blake River Group rocks, despite comparable lithological assemblages and some common geochemical characteristics. The McWatters basalts exhibit lower Ti/Y, Zr/Y, and La/Yb than the Blake River tholeiites, whereas the McWatters andesites display lower Ti/Zr and higher Zr/Y than the Blake River calc-alkaline units. The McWatters tholeiites can be correlated with northern Pontiac Group tholeiitic units based on similar trace-element ratios and parallel rare-earth-element patterns. Thus, the McWatters tholeiites represent Pontiac rocks, underthrust beneath the southern Abitibi belt and appearing as isolated and retrograded lenses in the Cadillac tectonic zone. They may represent the remnants of an ocean basin that once separated the southern Abitibi greenstone belt from the Pontiac Subprovince.


1995 ◽  
Vol 32 (5) ◽  
pp. 614-630 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kate Maclachlan ◽  
Herb Helmstaedt

An Archean mafic dike complex in the Chan Formation at the base of the mafic volcanic section of the Yellowknife greenstone belt consists of multiple metagabbro dikes and sills separated by screens of pillowed mafic volcanic rocks, which are cut by a younger postvolcanic metadiabase dike swarm. Field relationships and geochemical characteristics are compatible with a comagmatic origin for the metagabbro and metavolcanic rocks that were fed through and deposited on an older, rift-related, supracrustal sequence of the Dwyer Group. The synvolcanic metagabbro dikes have extended the strike length of the volcanic section by at least 100%. The mafic rocks of the Chan Formation are geochemically similar to mid-ocean ridge basalt, possibly with a minor subduction-zone component. Preliminary εNd values for metagabbroic rocks are consistent with the derivation of magmas predominantly from a normal, depleted-mantle source. The Chan Formation is interpreted to have formed in a marginal basin-like setting, adjacent to a previously rifted and attenuated protocontinental margin.


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