The Bushmanland Group supracrustal succession, Aggeneys, Bushmanland, South Africa: Provenance, age of deposition and metamorphism

Russell Bailie*, Richard Armstrong, David Reid

*Corresponding author for this work

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    44 Citations (Scopus)

    Abstract

    The central portion of the structurally complex and poly-metamorphosed Namaqua Province of western South Africa is underlain by a series of pelitic and psammitic metasediments, termed the Bushmanland Group, which is host to world class Broken Hill-type Pb-Zn-Cu-Ag deposits at Aggeneys. Geochemical, U-Pb SHRIMP zircon geochronology and Sm-Nd isotopic determinations of the metasediments at Aggeneys were undertaken to determine the age and nature of the provenance, as well as to confine the age of deposition of the Bushmanland Group in this area. The metasediments were derived from moderately-weathered granodiorites to granites, or their volcanic equivalents, with ∼2.65 to ∼2.25 Ga Sm-Nd TDM model ages. Mixed sources are likely from the geochemical signatures of the metasediments as well as the varied detrital zircon ages, with two main age groupings present of ∼2.12 to ∼1.97 Ga and ∼1.88 Ga to ∼1.64 Ga. The upper part of the succession has a narrower compositional range and was derived from a more mafic provenance than the basal portion. The provenance is likely to have been a combination of ∼1.8 Ga Gladkop Suite granitic gneisses found to the west and the ∼2.1 to ∼1.9 Ga intrusive and volcanosedimentary rocks of the Richtersveld Subprovince to the northwest. The metasediments were deposited in a passive margin setting and underwent extensive reworking in addition to recycling. The time of deposition of the Bushmanland Group is constrained between the age of the youngest detrital zircon (∼1.64 Ga) and the onset of the regionally extensive Kibaran Orogeny at ∼1.2 Ga. Metamorphic overgrowths and rims on detrital zircons record two distinct events, the ∼1.21 to ∼1.18 Ga Kibaran Orogeny, characterised by extensive granitic magmatism, peak D2 deformation and peak upper amphibolite facies grade M2 metamorphism, and the more ubiquitous ∼1.04 to ∼1.01 Ga Namaquan Orogeny characterised by weaker M3 metamorphism.

    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)59-86
    Number of pages28
    JournalSouth African Journal of Geology
    Volume110
    Issue number1
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - Mar 2007

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