Tectonics of the Isua Supracrustal Belt 2: Microstructures Reveal Distributed Strain in the Absence of Major Fault Structures

Archean geological records are increasingly interpreted to indicate a ≤3.2 Ga initiation of plate tectonics on Earth. This hypothesis contrasts with dominant plate tectonic interpretations for the Eoarchean (ca. 4.0–3.6 Ga) Isua supracrustal belt (southwest Greenland). Alternatively, recent work sho...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Zuo, J, Webb, AAG, Piazolo, S, Wang, Q, Müller, T, Ramírez-Salazar, A, Haproff, PJ
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2021
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Online Access:https://eprints.whiterose.ac.uk/170613/
https://eprints.whiterose.ac.uk/170613/5/2020TC006514.pdf
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Summary:Archean geological records are increasingly interpreted to indicate a ≤3.2 Ga initiation of plate tectonics on Earth. This hypothesis contrasts with dominant plate tectonic interpretations for the Eoarchean (ca. 4.0–3.6 Ga) Isua supracrustal belt (southwest Greenland). Alternatively, recent work shows the belt could have formed via heat-pipe tectonics. Predicted strain distributions across the belt vary between models. Plate tectonic models predict a dominant unidirectional shear sense, corresponding to subduction vergence, and strain localization within ∼10-m-scale shear zones. In contrast, the proposed heat-pipe model predicts two opposing shear senses, corresponding to opposite limbs of 0.1-m to km-scale a-type folds (i.e., sheath and curtain folds), with relatively equal strain distributed across the belt. Here, we present the first microstructure study using thin-section petrography and electron backscatter diffraction analysis on quartz of oriented samples from throughout the Isua supracrustal belt. Key findings are: (1) the Eoarchean Isua supracrustal belt was deformed at ∼500°C–650°C, with potential postdeformational recovery at similar or lower temperatures, (2) the spatial distribution of the two opposing shear senses which dominate the belt (top-to-southeast and top-to-northwest) appears to be random, and (3) the strain intensity across the belt appears to be quasiuniform as evidenced by the uniformly low (mostly <0.1) M-indexes of quartz fabrics, such that no ≤ 100 -m-scale shear zones can be detected. Our findings are only consistent with the predictions of the heat-pipe model and do not require plate tectonics, so the geology of the belt is compatible with a ≤3.2 Ga initiation of plate tectonics.