Mesoarchean kola-karelia continent

The Mesoarchean Kola-Karelia continent in the eastern Fennoscandian Shield includes three tectonic provinces, Kola, Karelia and Belomoria, that were formed by the Paleoarchean and Mesoarchean microcontinents. Traces of Mesoarchean tonalite-trondhjemite-granodiorite (TTG)-type early crust were docume...

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Main Authors: Mints M.V., Dokukina K.A., Konilov A.N., Kaulina T.V., Belousova E.A., Dokukin P.A., Natapov L.M., Van K.V.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Geological Society of America
Subjects:
Online Access:https://repository.rudn.ru/records/article/record/4803/
id ftrudnuniv:oai:repository.rudn.ru:r/4803
record_format openpolar
institution Open Polar
collection Peoples' Friendship University of Russia (RUDN): Open repository
op_collection_id ftrudnuniv
language English
topic Europium
Feldspar
Glass
Granite
Hydraulic structures
Levees
Metamorphic rocks
Silicate minerals
Structural geology
Tectonics
Fennoscandian Shields
Greenstone belts
High pressure metamorphism
High temperature
Ophiolite complex
Slow-spreading ridges
Southwest Indian Ridge
Tectonic settings
Gallium
spellingShingle Europium
Feldspar
Glass
Granite
Hydraulic structures
Levees
Metamorphic rocks
Silicate minerals
Structural geology
Tectonics
Fennoscandian Shields
Greenstone belts
High pressure metamorphism
High temperature
Ophiolite complex
Slow-spreading ridges
Southwest Indian Ridge
Tectonic settings
Gallium
Mints M.V.
Dokukina K.A.
Konilov A.N.
Kaulina T.V.
Belousova E.A.
Dokukin P.A.
Natapov L.M.
Van K.V.
Mesoarchean kola-karelia continent
topic_facet Europium
Feldspar
Glass
Granite
Hydraulic structures
Levees
Metamorphic rocks
Silicate minerals
Structural geology
Tectonics
Fennoscandian Shields
Greenstone belts
High pressure metamorphism
High temperature
Ophiolite complex
Slow-spreading ridges
Southwest Indian Ridge
Tectonic settings
Gallium
description The Mesoarchean Kola-Karelia continent in the eastern Fennoscandian Shield includes three tectonic provinces, Kola, Karelia and Belomoria, that were formed by the Paleoarchean and Mesoarchean microcontinents. Traces of Mesoarchean tonalite-trondhjemite-granodiorite (TTG)-type early crust were documented in all of the most ancient units of the Kola-Karelia continent. Ancient crust was revealed and dated in the Ranua and Iisalmi microcontinents, 3.5-3.4 Ga; Vodlozero and Khetolambina microcontinents, 3.25-3.15 Ga; Kuhmo-Segozero microcontinent, 3.0 Ga; Murmansk and Inari-Kola microcontinents, 2.93 Ga; and Kianta microcontinent, 2.83-2.81 Ga. In the older (>3.0 Ga) tectonic units and microcontinents, the ancient crust was possibly formed in brief bursts of endogenic activity. In younger microcontinents (3.0-2.93 Ga), these processes could continue until 2.8 and even 2.72 Ga. The tectonic settings in which early TTG crust has been produced are largely uncertain. The primary melt glassy inclusions with a glass phase in cores of prismatic zircon crystals from TTG gneisses provide evidence for the volcanic origin of gneiss protolith. Suggested genetic modeling of TTG-type complexes assumes that felsic K-Na melts with positive Eu anomaly are a product of dry high-temperature partial melting of the previously formed mafic-to-felsic crustal rocks and/or thick older TTG crust. Positive Eu anomaly in the eutectic is directly related to the predominance of plagioclase and K-feldspar in the melt. TTG-type crust melted to produce granitegranodiorite (GG) rocks. Earliest microcontinents are separated by Mesoarchean greenstone belts (mainly 3.05-2.85 Ga, in some cases up to 2.75 Ga), which are fragments of paleo-islandarc systems accreted to their margins: the Kolmozero-Voronya, Central Belomorian, Vedlozero-Segozero, Sumozero-Kenozero, and Tipasjärvi-Kuhmo-Suomussalmi belts; and the mature island arcs (microcontinents): Khetolambina and Kovdozero. These structural units are characterized by significant extent, close to rectilinear trend, localization along the boundaries between Archean microcontinents, and a specific set of petrotectonic assemblages (basalt-andesite-rhyolite, komatiite-tholeiite, and andesite-dacite associations). The recently discovered Meso-Neoarchean Belomorian eclogite province that is structurally linked with the Central Belomorian greenstone belt contains two eclogite associations distributed within TTG gneisses: the subduction-type Salma association and the Gridino eclogitized mafic dikes. The protolith of the Salma eclogites is thought to have been a sequence of gabbro, Fe-Ti gabbro, and troctolite, formed at ca. 2.9 Ga in a slow-spreading ridge (similar to the Southwest Indian Ridge). The main subduction and eclogite-facies events occurred between ca. 2.87 and ca. 2.82 Ga. Mafic magma injections into the crust of the active margin that led to formation of the Grigino dike swarm were associated with emplacement of a mid-ocean ridge in a subduction zone, beginning at ca. 2.87 Ga. Crustal delamination of the active margin and subsequent involvement of the lower crust in subduction 2.87-2.82 Ga ago led to high-pressure metamorphism of the Gridino dikes that reached eclogite-facies conditions during a collision event between 2.82 and 2.78 Ga. This collision resulted in consolidation of the Karelia, Kola, and Khetolamba blocks and formation of the Mesoarchean Belomorian accretionary-collisional orogen. To date, the subductionrelated Salma eclogites provide the most complete and meaningful information on the nature of plate tectonics in the Archean, from ocean-fl oor spreading to subduction and collision. The Kovdozero granite-greenstone terrain that separates the Khetolambina and Kuhmo-Segozero microcontinents is formed by TTG granitoids and gneisses hosting metasediments and metavolcanics of several greenstone belts, which belonged to the Parandovo-Tiksheozero island arc that existed from ca. 2.81 to 2.77 Ga. The Iringora greenstone belt includes the ophiolite complex of the same name with an age of 2.78 Ga. The collision of microcontinents resulted in the upward squeezing of the island arc and the obduction of its marginal portions onto surrounding structures. © 2015 The Geological Society of America. All rights reserved.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Mints M.V.
Dokukina K.A.
Konilov A.N.
Kaulina T.V.
Belousova E.A.
Dokukin P.A.
Natapov L.M.
Van K.V.
author_facet Mints M.V.
Dokukina K.A.
Konilov A.N.
Kaulina T.V.
Belousova E.A.
Dokukin P.A.
Natapov L.M.
Van K.V.
author_sort Mints M.V.
title Mesoarchean kola-karelia continent
title_short Mesoarchean kola-karelia continent
title_full Mesoarchean kola-karelia continent
title_fullStr Mesoarchean kola-karelia continent
title_full_unstemmed Mesoarchean kola-karelia continent
title_sort mesoarchean kola-karelia continent
publisher Geological Society of America
url https://repository.rudn.ru/records/article/record/4803/
long_lat ENVELOPE(34.675,34.675,65.923,65.923)
ENVELOPE(27.029,27.029,68.906,68.906)
ENVELOPE(33.279,33.279,66.358,66.358)
ENVELOPE(31.560,31.560,66.761,66.761)
ENVELOPE(27.000,27.000,65.767,65.767)
ENVELOPE(32.133,32.133,65.817,65.817)
ENVELOPE(35.150,35.150,63.933,63.933)
geographic Gridino
Inari
Indian
Khetolambina
Kovdozero
Murmansk
Ranua
Salma
Sumozero
geographic_facet Gridino
Inari
Indian
Khetolambina
Kovdozero
Murmansk
Ranua
Salma
Sumozero
genre Fennoscandian
genre_facet Fennoscandian
op_source Special Paper of the Geological Society of America
op_relation https://doi.org/10.1130/2015.2510(02)
https://repository.rudn.ru/records/article/record/4803/
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1130/2015.2510(02
_version_ 1765998768876945408
spelling ftrudnuniv:oai:repository.rudn.ru:r/4803 2023-05-15T16:13:10+02:00 Mesoarchean kola-karelia continent Mints M.V. Dokukina K.A. Konilov A.N. Kaulina T.V. Belousova E.A. Dokukin P.A. Natapov L.M. Van K.V. https://repository.rudn.ru/records/article/record/4803/ EN eng Geological Society of America https://doi.org/10.1130/2015.2510(02) https://repository.rudn.ru/records/article/record/4803/ Special Paper of the Geological Society of America Europium Feldspar Glass Granite Hydraulic structures Levees Metamorphic rocks Silicate minerals Structural geology Tectonics Fennoscandian Shields Greenstone belts High pressure metamorphism High temperature Ophiolite complex Slow-spreading ridges Southwest Indian Ridge Tectonic settings Gallium Article ftrudnuniv https://doi.org/10.1130/2015.2510(02 2022-01-03T08:07:32Z The Mesoarchean Kola-Karelia continent in the eastern Fennoscandian Shield includes three tectonic provinces, Kola, Karelia and Belomoria, that were formed by the Paleoarchean and Mesoarchean microcontinents. Traces of Mesoarchean tonalite-trondhjemite-granodiorite (TTG)-type early crust were documented in all of the most ancient units of the Kola-Karelia continent. Ancient crust was revealed and dated in the Ranua and Iisalmi microcontinents, 3.5-3.4 Ga; Vodlozero and Khetolambina microcontinents, 3.25-3.15 Ga; Kuhmo-Segozero microcontinent, 3.0 Ga; Murmansk and Inari-Kola microcontinents, 2.93 Ga; and Kianta microcontinent, 2.83-2.81 Ga. In the older (>3.0 Ga) tectonic units and microcontinents, the ancient crust was possibly formed in brief bursts of endogenic activity. In younger microcontinents (3.0-2.93 Ga), these processes could continue until 2.8 and even 2.72 Ga. The tectonic settings in which early TTG crust has been produced are largely uncertain. The primary melt glassy inclusions with a glass phase in cores of prismatic zircon crystals from TTG gneisses provide evidence for the volcanic origin of gneiss protolith. Suggested genetic modeling of TTG-type complexes assumes that felsic K-Na melts with positive Eu anomaly are a product of dry high-temperature partial melting of the previously formed mafic-to-felsic crustal rocks and/or thick older TTG crust. Positive Eu anomaly in the eutectic is directly related to the predominance of plagioclase and K-feldspar in the melt. TTG-type crust melted to produce granitegranodiorite (GG) rocks. Earliest microcontinents are separated by Mesoarchean greenstone belts (mainly 3.05-2.85 Ga, in some cases up to 2.75 Ga), which are fragments of paleo-islandarc systems accreted to their margins: the Kolmozero-Voronya, Central Belomorian, Vedlozero-Segozero, Sumozero-Kenozero, and Tipasjärvi-Kuhmo-Suomussalmi belts; and the mature island arcs (microcontinents): Khetolambina and Kovdozero. These structural units are characterized by significant extent, close to rectilinear trend, localization along the boundaries between Archean microcontinents, and a specific set of petrotectonic assemblages (basalt-andesite-rhyolite, komatiite-tholeiite, and andesite-dacite associations). The recently discovered Meso-Neoarchean Belomorian eclogite province that is structurally linked with the Central Belomorian greenstone belt contains two eclogite associations distributed within TTG gneisses: the subduction-type Salma association and the Gridino eclogitized mafic dikes. The protolith of the Salma eclogites is thought to have been a sequence of gabbro, Fe-Ti gabbro, and troctolite, formed at ca. 2.9 Ga in a slow-spreading ridge (similar to the Southwest Indian Ridge). The main subduction and eclogite-facies events occurred between ca. 2.87 and ca. 2.82 Ga. Mafic magma injections into the crust of the active margin that led to formation of the Grigino dike swarm were associated with emplacement of a mid-ocean ridge in a subduction zone, beginning at ca. 2.87 Ga. Crustal delamination of the active margin and subsequent involvement of the lower crust in subduction 2.87-2.82 Ga ago led to high-pressure metamorphism of the Gridino dikes that reached eclogite-facies conditions during a collision event between 2.82 and 2.78 Ga. This collision resulted in consolidation of the Karelia, Kola, and Khetolamba blocks and formation of the Mesoarchean Belomorian accretionary-collisional orogen. To date, the subductionrelated Salma eclogites provide the most complete and meaningful information on the nature of plate tectonics in the Archean, from ocean-fl oor spreading to subduction and collision. The Kovdozero granite-greenstone terrain that separates the Khetolambina and Kuhmo-Segozero microcontinents is formed by TTG granitoids and gneisses hosting metasediments and metavolcanics of several greenstone belts, which belonged to the Parandovo-Tiksheozero island arc that existed from ca. 2.81 to 2.77 Ga. The Iringora greenstone belt includes the ophiolite complex of the same name with an age of 2.78 Ga. The collision of microcontinents resulted in the upward squeezing of the island arc and the obduction of its marginal portions onto surrounding structures. © 2015 The Geological Society of America. All rights reserved. Article in Journal/Newspaper Fennoscandian Peoples' Friendship University of Russia (RUDN): Open repository Gridino ENVELOPE(34.675,34.675,65.923,65.923) Inari ENVELOPE(27.029,27.029,68.906,68.906) Indian Khetolambina ENVELOPE(33.279,33.279,66.358,66.358) Kovdozero ENVELOPE(31.560,31.560,66.761,66.761) Murmansk Ranua ENVELOPE(27.000,27.000,65.767,65.767) Salma ENVELOPE(32.133,32.133,65.817,65.817) Sumozero ENVELOPE(35.150,35.150,63.933,63.933)