Kalahari Craton during the assembly and dispersal of Rodinia

International audience In this paper we review the dimensions, geometry and architecture of the components of the Kalahari Craton and the various positions this important crustal block could have occupied within Rodinia. The Kalahari Craton was spawned from a small composite Archaean core which grew...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Precambrian Research
Main Authors: Jacobs, J., Pisarevsky, S., Thomas, R. J., Becker, Thomas
Other Authors: Department of Earth Science Bergen (UiB), University of Bergen (UiB), Tectonics Special Research Centre, The University of Western Australia (UWA), British Geological Survey Keyworth, British Geological Survey (BGS), Bureau de Recherches Géologiques et Minières (BRGM)
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: HAL CCSD 2008
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Online Access:https://brgm.hal.science/hal-00643266
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.precamres.2007.04.022
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Summary:International audience In this paper we review the dimensions, geometry and architecture of the components of the Kalahari Craton and the various positions this important crustal block could have occupied within Rodinia. The Kalahari Craton was spawned from a small composite Archaean core which grew by prolonged crustal accretion in the Palaeoproterozoic along its NW side (Magondi- Okwa-Kheis belt, Rehoboth Subprovince) to form the Proto-Kalahari Craton by 1750 Ma. From ca. 1400-1000 Ma, all margins of this crustal entity recorded intense tectonic activity: the NW margin was a major active continental margin between ca. 1400 and 1200 Ma and along the southern and eastern margins, the Namaqua-Natal-Maud-Mozambique belt records a major arc-accretion and continent-collision collision event between ca. 1100 and 1050 Ma. By ca. 1050 Ma, the Proto-Kalahari nucleus was almost completely rimmed by voluminous Mesoproterozoic crust and became a larger entity, the Kalahari Craton. Apart from southern Africa, fragments of the Kalahari Craton are now exposed in East- and West-Antarctica, the Falkland Islands and possibly also in South America. Immediately prior to the onset of arc- and continent-continent collision along the Namaqua-Natal-Maud Belt (part of the widespread "Grenville-age" orogeny during which Rodinia was assembled), Kalahari was subjected to intraplate magmatism - the Umkondo-Borg Large Igneous Province - at ca. 1110 Ma. The post- Rodinia rift and drift history of the Kalahari Craton is best preserved along the western, southwestern and north-western margin, where rift sediments and volcanics indicate rifting and break-up at ca. 800-750 Ma. The position of the Kalahari Craton in Rodinia is problematic, and there is no unique solution for its placement in the supercontinent. One set of models has the Kalahari Craton lying along the SW side of Laurentia with the Namaqua-Natal-Maud belt facing either inboard (correlation with the Ottawan cycle of the Grenville orogen) or outboard (mainly for palaeomagnetic ...