Precambrian mafic dyke swarms from the central Indian Bastar craton: Temporal evolution of the subcontinental mantle

被引:20
|
作者
Srivastava, Rajesh K. [1 ]
机构
[1] Banaras Hindu Univ, Dept Geol, Igneous Petrol Lab, Varanasi 221005, Uttar Pradesh, India
关键词
D O I
10.1201/NOE0415398992.ch10
中图分类号
P3 [地球物理学]; P59 [地球化学];
学科分类号
0708 ; 070902 ;
摘要
The Archaean Bastar craton of central India comprises three different mafic dyke swarms of Precambrian age. Two sets of mafic dyke swarms are subalkaline tholeiitic in nature, whereas the third dyke swarm is high-Si, low-Ti and high-Mg in nature and documented as boninite-norite mafic rocks. The two sets of subalkaline mafic dykes were emplaced during the Mesoarchaean (BD1 swarm) and Paleoproterozoic (similar to 1.9 Ga; BD2 swarm), respectively, whereas boninite-norite (BN) dyke swarm is emplaced in Neoarchaean. BD1 dykes are low Ti + Fe + HFSE and high-Mg olivine to quartz normative rocks, whereas BD2 dykes are predominantly quartz normative with relatively high Ti + Fe + HFSE and low-Mg contents. These distinguished geochemical characteristics, and compatible-incompatible trace element modelling suggest that the Mesoarchaean BD1 dykes were derived from similar to 15-20% batch melting of a depleted lherzolite mantle source; in contrast, the Paleoproterozoic BD2 dykes were derived from similar to 7-10% batch melting of a metasomatized enriched mantle source. The BN dykes are product of different pulses of high-Mg boninitic magma that was produced by similar to 20% melting of a refractory mantle source. Voluminous extraction of basaltic material during the Archaean (BD1 phase) was probably the main cause for producing refractory lithosphere at the end of Archaean (responsible for BN phase) and later, during the Paleoproterozoic, an enriched of metasomatized mantle lithosphere was formed (responsible for BD2 phase); this exemplifies temporal evolution of the subcontinental mantle of the central Indian Bastar craton.
引用
收藏
页码:147 / 159
页数:13
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Interaction of coeval felsic and mafic magmas from the Kanker granite, Pithora region, Bastar Craton, Central India
    Elangovan, R.
    Krishna, Kumar
    Vishwakarma, Neeraj
    Hari, K. R.
    Mohan, M. Ram
    JOURNAL OF EARTH SYSTEM SCIENCE, 2017, 126 (07)
  • [42] Paleoproterozoic mafic dyke swarms from the Dharwar craton; paleomagnetic poles for India from 2.37 to 1.88 Ga and rethinking the Columbia supercontinent
    Belica, Mercedes E.
    Piispa, Elisa J.
    Meert, Joseph G.
    Pesonen, Lauri J.
    Plado, Jueri
    Pandit, Manoj K.
    Kamenov, George D.
    Celestino, Matthew
    PRECAMBRIAN RESEARCH, 2014, 244 : 100 - 122
  • [43] Origin of dyke swarms by mixing of metasomatized subcontinental lithospheric mantle-derived and lower crustal magmas in the Guocheng fault belt, Jiaodong Peninsula, North China Craton
    Tan, Jun
    Wei, Jun-Hao
    Shi, Wen-Jie
    Feng, Bo
    Li, Yan-Jun
    Fu, Le-Bing
    GEOLOGICAL JOURNAL, 2013, 48 (05) : 516 - 530
  • [44] Lithospheric thinning of the North China craton: Insights from Early Cretaceous intermediate-mafic dyke swarms in Jiaodong peninsula
    Ji, Lei
    Liu, Junlai
    Ding, Xu
    Luo, Zhiming
    Ni, Jinlong
    Shi, Xiaoxiao
    Hai Nam Dao
    GONDWANA RESEARCH, 2022, 107 : 84 - 106
  • [45] Emplacement ages of Paleoproterozoic mafic dyke swarms in eastern Dharwar craton, India: Implications for paleoreconstructions and support for a ∼30° change in dyke trends from south to north
    Soderlund, Ulf
    Bleeker, Wouter
    Demirer, Kursad
    Srivastava, Rajesh K.
    Hamilton, Michael
    Nilsson, Mimmi
    Pesonen, Lauri J.
    Samal, Amiya K.
    Jayananda, Mudlappa
    Ernst, Richard E.
    Srinivas, Madabhooshi
    PRECAMBRIAN RESEARCH, 2019, 329 : 26 - 43
  • [46] Interaction of coeval felsic and mafic magmas from the Kanker granite, Pithora region, Bastar Craton, Central India
    R Elangovan
    Kumar Krishna
    Neeraj Vishwakarma
    K R Hari
    M Ram Mohan
    Journal of Earth System Science, 2017, 126
  • [47] Spatial and temporal distribution patterns of Precambrian mafic dyke swarms in northern Mauritania (West African craton): analysis and results from remote-sensing interpretation, geographical information systems (GIS), Google Earth ™ images, and regional geology
    Ba, Moussa Hamath
    Ibouh, Hassan
    Lo, Khalidou
    Youbi, Nassrddine
    Jaffal, Mohammed
    Ernst, Richard E.
    Niang, Abdoul Jelil
    Dia, Ibrahima
    Abdeina, El Houssein
    Bensalah, Mohamed Khalil
    Boumehdi, Moulay Ahmed
    Soderlund, Ulf
    ARABIAN JOURNAL OF GEOSCIENCES, 2020, 13 (05)
  • [48] Spatial and temporal distribution patterns of Precambrian mafic dyke swarms in northern Mauritania (West African craton): analysis and results from remote-sensing interpretation, geographical information systems (GIS), Google Earth ™ images, and regional geology
    Moussa Hamath Ba
    Hassan Ibouh
    Khalidou Lo
    Nassrddine Youbi
    Mohammed Jaffal
    Richard E. Ernst
    Abdoul Jelil Niang
    Ibrahima Dia
    El Houssein Abdeina
    Mohamed Khalil Bensalah
    Moulay Ahmed Boumehdi
    Ulf Söderlund
    Arabian Journal of Geosciences, 2020, 13
  • [49] Qualitative analysis of mafic dyke swarms and kimberlites from morphological and geophysical signatures, NW of Proterozoic Cuddapah basin, Eastern Dharwar craton
    Reddy, R. Ananda
    JOURNAL OF THE GEOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF INDIA, 2014, 83 (03) : 235 - 251
  • [50] Qualitative analysis of mafic dyke swarms and kimberlites from morphological and geophysical signatures, NW of Proterozoic Cuddapah basin, Eastern Dharwar craton
    R. Ananda Reddy
    Journal of the Geological Society of India, 2014, 83 : 235 - 251