LA-ICP-MS U–Pb zircon age constraints on the Paleoproterozoic and Neoarchean history of the Sandmata Complex in Rajasthan within the NW Indian Plate — Chandrika Rao (2011) | RDL Network
LA-ICP-MS U–Pb zircon age constraints on the Paleoproterozoic and Neoarchean history of the Sandmata Complex in Rajasthan within the NW Indian Plate
Journal of Asian Earth Sciences 42(3): 286-305
Article 2011 English
Authors
CR
Chandrika Rao
MS
M. Santosh
RP
Ritesh Purohit
Abstract
1 min read
The Sandmata Complex in Rajasthan within the NW Indian shield represents a metamorphosed volcano-sedimentary sequence incorporated within a late Paleoproterozoic suture zone. Here we report laser ablation ICP-MS age data and REE geochemistry of zircons from four rock types in the Sandmata Complex – a foliated biotite–quartz gneiss, a leucocratic gneiss, a biotite gneiss and a porphyritic granite. The zircons in the biotite gneiss and porphyritic granite show magmatic textures with a single Paleoproterozoic age population, whereas the leucocratic gneiss and biotite–quartz gneiss samples carry zircons with an Archean provenance history and metamorphic characteristics. U–Pb dating of zircon domains in these samples shows two dominant age populations: Paleoproterozoic and Neoarchean, and indicate that (a) granulite facies metamorphism (biotite–quartz gneiss: ca. 1708Ma) and the granitic magmatism (porphyritic granite: ca. 1733Ma) were synchronous; and (b) the igneous protoliths of the leucocratic gneiss (ca. 2750Ma) and biotite gneiss (ca. 2698Ma) were formed in the Archean. The zircons from both gniesses and granite show high REE contents, prominent HREE enrichment and a conspicuous negative Eu anomaly suggesting a common melt source. We correlate the Paleoproterozoic magmatic ages from Sandmata Complex with a subduction–accretion history prior to the final collisional assembly of the continental fragments in the Neoproterozoic, comparable with a similar history all along the Central Indian Tectonic Zone, as well as from the Eastern Indian Suture, probably indicating the continuity of the suture all along Peninsular India. Our zircon data also reveal the vestiges of Archean rocks within the Paleoproterozoic suture.
Discussion(0)
No comments yet. Be the first to comment.