2009 Portland GSA Annual Meeting (18-21 October 2009)

Paper No. 3
Presentation Time: 9:00 AM-6:00 PM

PAN-AFRICAN GRANITOID MAGMATISM IN CENTRAL DRONNING MAUD LAND CAUSED BY DELAMINATION?


KLEINHANNS, Ilka C.1, JACOBS, Joachim1 and ROLAND, Norbert W.2, (1)Department of Earth Science, University of Bergen, Allegaten 41, Bergen, 5007, Norway, (2)Bundesanstalt fuer Geowissenschaften u. Rohstoffe, Stilleweg 2, Hannover, 30655, Germany, ilka.schoenberg@geo.uib.no

Central Dronning Maud Land represents the southern end of the East African-Antarctic orogen (EAAO) that originated from the collision of various parts of East- and West- Protogondwana during Neoproterozoic until early Paleozoic times. This megaorogen is more than 8000 km long and stretches from northern Egypt-Arabia through Mozambique into East Antarctica. It shows a strong lateral variation in orogenic styles, separated by the E-W-trending Lurio belt in Mozambique with accretion in its northern part and continent-continent collision in the southern part. In addition, numerous Pan-African granitoids are observed in the southern part that are virtually absent in the northern part. Two contrasting models try to explain the existence of these granitoids: (i) SE-directed thrusting of nappes from the combined Damara-Zambesi mobile belt towards Dronning Maud Land [2] thereby explaining the granitoid magmatism by crustal thickening; (ii) extensional tectonics with delamination of the orogenic root [1] thereby explaining the granitoid magmatism by upwelling of hot asthenosphere under a thinned continental crust. Major and trace element signatures of these granitoids show a subalkaline ferroan character with the exception of the granitoids of the Petermann-Ketten that are alkaline. In general, all granitoids show an A2-type signature. This points towards an extensional regime for the evolution of granitoid melts. Intrusion of the granitoids seems to shift from ~510 Ma in the Nampula province (Mozambique) to ~500 Ma in central Dronning Maud land (Antarctica) [1]. No older components in these rocks have been found via U/Pb zircon age determination sofar, i.e. no older Mesoproterozoic zircon cores have been observed yet. Sm-Nd isotope characteristics of Antarctic granitoids reveal consistently older TDM around 1.5 Ga and no correlation with their respective SiO2-content is observed. In our opinion that indicates the older Sm-Nd signature to be derived from the mantle and not via assimilation during ascent, thus favouring the second proposed model.

[1] Jacobs et al. (2008) In: Satish-Kumar et al. Geol. Society, London, Spec. Pub. 308, 69-90. [2] Grantham et al. (2008) In: Satish-Kumar et al. Geol. Society, London, Spec. Pub. 308, 91-119.