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-List Of Titles -A Translithospheric suture in the vanished 1-Ga lithospheric root of South India : evidence from contrasting lithosphere sections in the Dharwar Craton

Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/1959.14/72107

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Title
A Translithospheric suture in the vanished 1-Ga lithospheric root of South India : evidence from contrasting lithosphere sections in the Dharwar Craton
Related
Lithos, Vol. 112, Supplement 2, p.1109-1119
DOI
10.1016/j.lithos.2009.05.015
Publisher
Elsevier
Date
2009
Author/Creator
Griffin, W. L
Author/Creator
Kobussen, A. F
Author/Creator
Babu, E. V. S. S. K
Author/Creator
O'Reilly, Suzanne Yvette
Author/Creator
Norris, R
Author/Creator
Sengupta, P
Description
Garnet xenocrysts and eclogite xenoliths from 15 kimberlites (1.0–1.1 Ga in age) have been used to map the composition and structure of the lithospheric mantle along an 80-km traverse across the eastern margin of the Closepet Granite in Andhra Pradesh. The SCLM at the SW end of the traverse is more depleted (abundant harzburgites, mean XMg of olivine ≈ 93.5, mean whole-rock Al₂O₃ ≈ 1.5%) than that at the NE end (fewer harzburgites, XMg ≈ 92, Al₂O₃ > 2%). The depleted layer is ca 195 km thick in the SW, and ca 170 km in the NE, though geotherms are similarly low (ca 35–37 mW/m²). The middle of the traverse is underlain by a strongly refertilised SCLM with a higher geotherm (ca 40 mW/m²) and extensive evidence of metasomatism. At the SW end of the traverse, abundant eclogites are tightly concentrated in a layer from 175 to 190 km depth, coinciding with a zone of melt-related metasomatism. In the central part, eclogites are distributed through the highly metasomatised section from 90 to 160 km depth. These data suggest that the kimberlites at either end of the traverse sampled two distinct lithospheric blocks, perhaps coinciding with the Eastern and Western Dharwar Cratons. The zone of refertilised SCLM between them is interpreted as the cratonic suture, metasomatised by mafic melts (now eclogites). If this suture dips 70–80° to the east, its surface outcrop lies within the Closepet Granite. The “tilt” of the proposed cratonic suture may reflect overthrusting of the Eastern Dharwar Craton crust up to 100 km to the west. Recent geophysical data (seismic, MT) suggest that the depleted lithospheric root beneath the Dharwar Craton that was sampled by the 1.1 Ga kimberlites is no longer present. The removal or major modification of this root could have occurred during the breakup of Gondwanaland, and may help to explain India's rapid northward drift. India thus joins the North China Craton as an example of the destruction of an Archean continental keel.
Description
11 page(s)
Subject Keyword
Dharwar craton
Subject Keyword
Peridotite garnets
Subject Keyword
Eclogites
Subject Keyword
Geotherms
Subject Keyword
Mantle metasomatism
Subject Keyword
Lithospheric roots
Resource Type
journal article
Organisation
Macquarie University. Dept. of Earth and Planetary Sciences

Identifier
http://hdl.handle.net/1959.14/72107
Identifier
ISSN:0024-4937
Identifier
mq-rm-2009002620
Language
eng
Reviewed
Reviewed
Save/E-mail Citation
Citation Format
E-mail Address
Subject
"Lithos"
 
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