Low-pressure metamorphism during Archaean crustal growth: a low-strain zone in the northern Nagssugtoqidian orogen, West Greenland

One of the first detailed accounts of Precambrian supracrustal rocks in central West Greenland came from a small group of islands and skerries a few kilometres north-east of Aasiaat (Fig. 1). In 1948, K. Ellitsgaard-Rasmussen spent a few days on the islands and published a metamorphic study of their...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Geological Survey of Denmark and Greenland (GEUS) Bulletin
Main Authors: Garde, Adam A., Christiansen, Mads Sylvest, Hollis, Julie A., Mazur, Stanislaw, van Gool, Jeroen A.M.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Geological Survey of Denmark and Greenland (GEUS) 2004
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Online Access:https://geusbulletin.org/index.php/geusb/article/view/4789
https://doi.org/10.34194/geusb.v4.4789
Description
Summary:One of the first detailed accounts of Precambrian supracrustal rocks in central West Greenland came from a small group of islands and skerries a few kilometres north-east of Aasiaat (Fig. 1). In 1948, K. Ellitsgaard-Rasmussen spent a few days on the islands and published a metamorphic study of their low-grade greenstones and aluminous clastic rocks (Ellitsgaard-Rasmussen 1954). He observed a striking dissimilarity between these supracrustal rocks and the grey gneisses found in most of the Aasiaat region, although the latter were at that time also assumed to be of supracrustal origin. He furthermore noted that the regional significance of the islands should be pursued, and that the island of Maniitsoq 4 km west of the small islands might hold a key to their interpretation. More than 50 years were to elapse before the islands were surveyed again in July 2003, during field work for the Ikamiut map sheet in the northern Nagssugtoqidian orogen (van Gool et al. 2002). The collision of two Archaean continents during the c. 1850 Ma Nagssugtoqidian orogeny caused intensive structural and thermal reworking at up to granulite facies grade in most of central West Greenland; see Connelly et al. (2000) and van Gool et al. (2002). The small islands north-east of Aasiaat are indeed regionally important, because they document a previously unrecognised low-grade, low-strain domain of presumed Archaean age that has largely escaped the Nagssugtoqidian orogeny, and as predicted by Ellitsgaard-Rasmussen (1954) a clue to their significance was found on Maniitsoq.