TY - JOUR
T1 - Geology and geochronology of the Archean plutonic rocks in the northeast Democratic Republic of Congo
AU - Turnbull, R. E.
AU - Allibone, A. H.
AU - Matheys, F.
AU - Fanning, C. M.
AU - Kasereka, E.
AU - Kabete, J.
AU - McNaughton, N. J.
AU - Mwandale, E.
AU - Holliday, J.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 Elsevier B.V.
PY - 2021/6/15
Y1 - 2021/6/15
N2 - Here we report the first regional-scale study of Archean plutonic rocks from 50,000 km2 of the northeast Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC). We include 50 new U-Pb zircon Sensitive High-Resolution Ion MicroProbe (SHRIMP) ages supported by petrographic and whole rock geochemical data from a further ~400 samples, and 39 additional U-Pb zircon ages reported by Kabete et al. (submitted) and Bird (2016). Felsic-intermediate magmatism across the northeast DRC occurred from ~ 3200 to 2530 Ma. Plutonism before ~ 2670 Ma is restricted to the West Nile Gneiss in eastern and northern-most DRC, whereas plutonism across the remainder of the northeast DRC initiated between 2670 and 2640 Ma. Two Neoproterozoic granite plutons ~ 1000–950 Ma are also present within the West Nile Gneiss. Magmatism between ~ 2670 and 2530 Ma marks the principal period of crustal growth in the northeast DRC. Felsic-intermediate plutonism between ~ 2670 and 2600 Ma included two suites of magnesian, calc-alkaline rocks, (1) a sodic-calcic suite with high Sr/Y ratios (>40) comparable with tonalite-trondhjemite-granodiorite (TTG) suites in other Archean terranes, and (2) a calc-alkaline to high-K suite of granitoids with low Sr/Y ratios (<40) and lower Na and Al contents, comparable with “low-Ca” granites in the Yilgarn Craton. In contrast, most granitoids emplaced between ~ 2600 and 2530 Ma have ferroan, high-K calc-alkaline compositions, and are enriched in high field strength (HFSE) and rare Earth elements (REE). Although the HFSE-elevated granitoids are comparable with Closepet-type, and “mafic granites” in other Neoarchean terranes, their volume within the northeast DRC appears unprecedented. Before ~ 2600 Ma partial melting of hydrous metabasalts at depths > 40 km is inferred to have produced the high Sr/Y magnesian granitoids, whereas the low Sr/Y magnesian granitoids were derived from melting-assimilation-storage-hybridization (MASH) processes in the overlying low-mid crust during the same period. Trans-lithospheric extension after ~ 2600 Ma, enabled asthenospheric mantle to interact with the base of the crust, resulting in high-temperature melting that produced the HFSE-elevated granitoids. Inherited Meso- and Paleoarchean zircons are almost completely restricted to the area within 30–40 km of the West Nile Gneiss, implying most of the northeast DRC is underlain by juvenile Neoarchean crust.
AB - Here we report the first regional-scale study of Archean plutonic rocks from 50,000 km2 of the northeast Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC). We include 50 new U-Pb zircon Sensitive High-Resolution Ion MicroProbe (SHRIMP) ages supported by petrographic and whole rock geochemical data from a further ~400 samples, and 39 additional U-Pb zircon ages reported by Kabete et al. (submitted) and Bird (2016). Felsic-intermediate magmatism across the northeast DRC occurred from ~ 3200 to 2530 Ma. Plutonism before ~ 2670 Ma is restricted to the West Nile Gneiss in eastern and northern-most DRC, whereas plutonism across the remainder of the northeast DRC initiated between 2670 and 2640 Ma. Two Neoproterozoic granite plutons ~ 1000–950 Ma are also present within the West Nile Gneiss. Magmatism between ~ 2670 and 2530 Ma marks the principal period of crustal growth in the northeast DRC. Felsic-intermediate plutonism between ~ 2670 and 2600 Ma included two suites of magnesian, calc-alkaline rocks, (1) a sodic-calcic suite with high Sr/Y ratios (>40) comparable with tonalite-trondhjemite-granodiorite (TTG) suites in other Archean terranes, and (2) a calc-alkaline to high-K suite of granitoids with low Sr/Y ratios (<40) and lower Na and Al contents, comparable with “low-Ca” granites in the Yilgarn Craton. In contrast, most granitoids emplaced between ~ 2600 and 2530 Ma have ferroan, high-K calc-alkaline compositions, and are enriched in high field strength (HFSE) and rare Earth elements (REE). Although the HFSE-elevated granitoids are comparable with Closepet-type, and “mafic granites” in other Neoarchean terranes, their volume within the northeast DRC appears unprecedented. Before ~ 2600 Ma partial melting of hydrous metabasalts at depths > 40 km is inferred to have produced the high Sr/Y magnesian granitoids, whereas the low Sr/Y magnesian granitoids were derived from melting-assimilation-storage-hybridization (MASH) processes in the overlying low-mid crust during the same period. Trans-lithospheric extension after ~ 2600 Ma, enabled asthenospheric mantle to interact with the base of the crust, resulting in high-temperature melting that produced the HFSE-elevated granitoids. Inherited Meso- and Paleoarchean zircons are almost completely restricted to the area within 30–40 km of the West Nile Gneiss, implying most of the northeast DRC is underlain by juvenile Neoarchean crust.
KW - Crustal growth
KW - Democratic Republic of Congo
KW - HFSE-elevated granite
KW - Neoarchean
KW - SHRIMP U-Pb zircon dating
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85103965266&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.precamres.2021.106133
DO - 10.1016/j.precamres.2021.106133
M3 - Article
SN - 0301-9268
VL - 358
JO - Precambrian Research
JF - Precambrian Research
M1 - 106133
ER -