TEMPORAL EVOLUTION OF THE LAKE VICTORIA NEOARCHEAN GREENSTONE BELTS, TANZANIA
The oldest volcanic rocks are largely basaltic with lesser felsic rocks erupted between 2840-2820 Ma in the Musoma-Mara and Sukumaland belts. Slightly younger, ~2800-Ma rhyolitic volcanic rocks in the same belts form the next youngest event. Felsic volcanic rocks between 27802760 Ma are found in the Sukumaland and Nzega belts, and to a lesser extent in the Musoma-Mara belt. Between ~27252715 Ma, rhyolitic volcanism is widespread in the Sukumaland and Nzega belts. In the latter, felsic volcanism was contemporaneous with BIF sedimentation. At ~27102695 Ma, dacitic volcanism commenced; it overlapped BIF sedimentation in Sukumaland where trachyandesite also intruded the sedimentary rocks. Dacitic volcanism and BIF sedimentation continued to ~2660 Ma across the region. Post-magmatic erosion filled late basins with the Kavirondian Group.
Plutonic rocks also form discrete temporal clusters, which appear to overlap gaps in the volcanic record. The oldest plutons are ~28602810 Ma tonalite to granodiorite in the Musoma-Mara belt. A widespread, temporally distinct period of dioritic plutonism between ~27702730 Ma is present at least in the Sukumaland and Nzega belts, and likely in others. Within a ~15 Ma time frame around 2700 Ma, volumetrically small quartz-feldspar porphyry intrusions, emplaced across the region, are spatially associated with the structurally-controlled gold deposits. Syenite, based on field relations, appears to have intruded between 26702660 Ma; these rocks have yet to be successfully dated.
Collectively, the Tanzanian greenstone belts appear to have undergone a temporally evolution similar to that of other auriferous Neoarchean greenstone belts, the Abitibi and Yilgarn cratons.