Episodic Eoarchaean crustal accretion (3.87 to 3.66 Ga) in West Greenland (Itsaq Gneiss Complex) and in northeastern China: review and synthesis

Eoarchaean crust in West Greenland (the Itsaq Gneiss Complex, 3870-3600 Ma) is >80% by volume orthogneisses derived from plutonic tonalite-trondhjemite-granodiorite (TTG) suites, <10% amphibolites derived from basalts and gabbros, <10% crustally derived granite,<1% metasedimentary rocks...

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Main Authors: Nutman, Allen P., Bennett, Vickie C., Friend, Clark R. L., Jenner, Frances, Wan, Yusheng, Liu, Dunyi
Other Authors: Cawood, P. A., Kröner, A.
Format: Book Part
Language:unknown
Published: GSL 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:https://oro.open.ac.uk/38170/
http://www.geolsoc.org.uk/SP318
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spelling ftopenunivgb:oai:oro.open.ac.uk:38170 2023-06-11T04:12:11+02:00 Episodic Eoarchaean crustal accretion (3.87 to 3.66 Ga) in West Greenland (Itsaq Gneiss Complex) and in northeastern China: review and synthesis Nutman, Allen P. Bennett, Vickie C. Friend, Clark R. L. Jenner, Frances Wan, Yusheng Liu, Dunyi Cawood, P. A. Kröner, A. 2009-07-28 https://oro.open.ac.uk/38170/ http://www.geolsoc.org.uk/SP318 unknown GSL Nutman, Allen P.; Bennett, Vickie C.; Friend, Clark R. L.; Jenner, Frances <http://oro.open.ac.uk/view/person/fej25.html>; Wan, Yusheng and Liu, Dunyi (2009). Episodic Eoarchaean crustal accretion (3.87 to 3.66 Ga) in West Greenland (Itsaq Gneiss Complex) and in northeastern China: review and synthesis. In: Cawood, P. A. and Kröner, A. eds. Earth Accretionary Systems in Space and Time. Special Publication of the Geological Society (318). London: GSL, pp. 127–154. Book Section None PeerReviewed 2009 ftopenunivgb 2023-05-28T05:50:18Z Eoarchaean crust in West Greenland (the Itsaq Gneiss Complex, 3870-3600 Ma) is >80% by volume orthogneisses derived from plutonic tonalite-trondhjemite-granodiorite (TTG) suites, <10% amphibolites derived from basalts and gabbros, <10% crustally derived granite,<1% metasedimentary rocks and ≪1% tectonic slices of upper mantle peridotite. Amphibolites at >3850, c. 3810 and c. 3710 Mahave some compositional similarities to modern island arc basalts (IAB), suggesting their origin by hydrous fluxing of a suprasubduction-zone upper mantle wedge. Most of the Eoarchaean tonalites match in composition high- silica, low-magnesian adakites, whose petrogenesis is dominated by partial melting of garnetiferous mafic rocks at high pressure. However, associated with the tonalites are volumetrically minor more magnesian quartz diorites, whose genesis probably involved melting of depleted mantle to which some slab-derived component had been added. This assemblage is evocative of suites of magmas produced at Phanerozoic convergent plate boundaries in the case where subducted crust is young and hot. Thus, Eoarchaean 'subduction' first gave rise to short-lived episodes of mantle wedge melting by hydrous fluxing, yielding IAB- like basalts ± boninites. In the hotter Eoarchaean Earth, flux-dominated destructive plate boundary magma generation quickly switched to slab melting of ('subducted') oceanic crust. This latter process produced the voluminous tonalites that were intruded into the slightly older sequences consisting of tectonically imbricated assemblages of IAB-like pillow lavas + sedimentary rocks, gabbros and upper mantle peridotite slivers. Zircon datingshows that Eoarchaean TTG production in the Itsaq Gneiss Complex was episodic (3870, 3850-3840, 3820-3810, 3795, 3760-3740, 3710-3695 and 3660 Ma). In each case, emplacement of small volumes of magma was probably followed by 10-40 Maquiescence, which allowed the associated thermal pulse to dissipate. This explains why Greenland Eoarchaean crustal growth did not ... Book Part Greenland The Open University: Open Research Online (ORO) Greenland
institution Open Polar
collection The Open University: Open Research Online (ORO)
op_collection_id ftopenunivgb
language unknown
description Eoarchaean crust in West Greenland (the Itsaq Gneiss Complex, 3870-3600 Ma) is >80% by volume orthogneisses derived from plutonic tonalite-trondhjemite-granodiorite (TTG) suites, <10% amphibolites derived from basalts and gabbros, <10% crustally derived granite,<1% metasedimentary rocks and ≪1% tectonic slices of upper mantle peridotite. Amphibolites at >3850, c. 3810 and c. 3710 Mahave some compositional similarities to modern island arc basalts (IAB), suggesting their origin by hydrous fluxing of a suprasubduction-zone upper mantle wedge. Most of the Eoarchaean tonalites match in composition high- silica, low-magnesian adakites, whose petrogenesis is dominated by partial melting of garnetiferous mafic rocks at high pressure. However, associated with the tonalites are volumetrically minor more magnesian quartz diorites, whose genesis probably involved melting of depleted mantle to which some slab-derived component had been added. This assemblage is evocative of suites of magmas produced at Phanerozoic convergent plate boundaries in the case where subducted crust is young and hot. Thus, Eoarchaean 'subduction' first gave rise to short-lived episodes of mantle wedge melting by hydrous fluxing, yielding IAB- like basalts ± boninites. In the hotter Eoarchaean Earth, flux-dominated destructive plate boundary magma generation quickly switched to slab melting of ('subducted') oceanic crust. This latter process produced the voluminous tonalites that were intruded into the slightly older sequences consisting of tectonically imbricated assemblages of IAB-like pillow lavas + sedimentary rocks, gabbros and upper mantle peridotite slivers. Zircon datingshows that Eoarchaean TTG production in the Itsaq Gneiss Complex was episodic (3870, 3850-3840, 3820-3810, 3795, 3760-3740, 3710-3695 and 3660 Ma). In each case, emplacement of small volumes of magma was probably followed by 10-40 Maquiescence, which allowed the associated thermal pulse to dissipate. This explains why Greenland Eoarchaean crustal growth did not ...
author2 Cawood, P. A.
Kröner, A.
format Book Part
author Nutman, Allen P.
Bennett, Vickie C.
Friend, Clark R. L.
Jenner, Frances
Wan, Yusheng
Liu, Dunyi
spellingShingle Nutman, Allen P.
Bennett, Vickie C.
Friend, Clark R. L.
Jenner, Frances
Wan, Yusheng
Liu, Dunyi
Episodic Eoarchaean crustal accretion (3.87 to 3.66 Ga) in West Greenland (Itsaq Gneiss Complex) and in northeastern China: review and synthesis
author_facet Nutman, Allen P.
Bennett, Vickie C.
Friend, Clark R. L.
Jenner, Frances
Wan, Yusheng
Liu, Dunyi
author_sort Nutman, Allen P.
title Episodic Eoarchaean crustal accretion (3.87 to 3.66 Ga) in West Greenland (Itsaq Gneiss Complex) and in northeastern China: review and synthesis
title_short Episodic Eoarchaean crustal accretion (3.87 to 3.66 Ga) in West Greenland (Itsaq Gneiss Complex) and in northeastern China: review and synthesis
title_full Episodic Eoarchaean crustal accretion (3.87 to 3.66 Ga) in West Greenland (Itsaq Gneiss Complex) and in northeastern China: review and synthesis
title_fullStr Episodic Eoarchaean crustal accretion (3.87 to 3.66 Ga) in West Greenland (Itsaq Gneiss Complex) and in northeastern China: review and synthesis
title_full_unstemmed Episodic Eoarchaean crustal accretion (3.87 to 3.66 Ga) in West Greenland (Itsaq Gneiss Complex) and in northeastern China: review and synthesis
title_sort episodic eoarchaean crustal accretion (3.87 to 3.66 ga) in west greenland (itsaq gneiss complex) and in northeastern china: review and synthesis
publisher GSL
publishDate 2009
url https://oro.open.ac.uk/38170/
http://www.geolsoc.org.uk/SP318
geographic Greenland
geographic_facet Greenland
genre Greenland
genre_facet Greenland
op_relation Nutman, Allen P.; Bennett, Vickie C.; Friend, Clark R. L.; Jenner, Frances <http://oro.open.ac.uk/view/person/fej25.html>; Wan, Yusheng and Liu, Dunyi (2009). Episodic Eoarchaean crustal accretion (3.87 to 3.66 Ga) in West Greenland (Itsaq Gneiss Complex) and in northeastern China: review and synthesis. In: Cawood, P. A. and Kröner, A. eds. Earth Accretionary Systems in Space and Time. Special Publication of the Geological Society (318). London: GSL, pp. 127–154.
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