On the origin of Archaean TTGs by migmatization of mantle plume-related metabasalts : Insights from the Lake Inari terrain, Arctic Fennoscandia

The conversion of basaltic crust into a thick, buoyant felsic crust of tonalite-trondhjemite-granodiorite (TTG) composition has been a fundamental process in the Earth's evolution during the Archaean Eon (4.03–2.50 Ga). The proposition that TTGs have formed as a result of the partial melting of...

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Main Authors: Halla, Jaana, Joshi, Kumar Batuk, Luttinen, Arto, Heilimo, Esa, Kurhila, Matti
Other Authors: Finnish Museum of Natural History
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Elsevier B.V. 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10138/577485
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author Halla, Jaana
Joshi, Kumar Batuk
Luttinen, Arto
Heilimo, Esa
Kurhila, Matti
author2 Finnish Museum of Natural History
author_facet Halla, Jaana
Joshi, Kumar Batuk
Luttinen, Arto
Heilimo, Esa
Kurhila, Matti
author_sort Halla, Jaana
collection HELDA – University of Helsinki Open Repository
description The conversion of basaltic crust into a thick, buoyant felsic crust of tonalite-trondhjemite-granodiorite (TTG) composition has been a fundamental process in the Earth's evolution during the Archaean Eon (4.03–2.50 Ga). The proposition that TTGs have formed as a result of the partial melting of hydrated mafic rocks is now well corroborated by geochemical modelling and experimental methods although these processes have only rarely been tested or documented by field studies. Here, we investigate the migmatite structures and major and trace element geochemistry of the 2.9–2.6 Ga Lake Inari TTG-metabasalt terrain in northern Finland, in the Lapland-Kola Province of Arctic Fennoscandia. The Lake Inari metabasalts geochemically resemble the flood basalts of the Phanerozoic oceanic plateaus. The TTGs show overall high Si and Na/K characteristics and have two coeval and intermingled geochemical endmembers, the low-HREE and high-HREE TTGs. Their variable geochemical signatures may reflect internal magmatic processes such as mingling of magmas that have experienced different evolutionary paths in terms of source mineralogy, degree of partial melting, differentiation and migration. The bimodal TTG-metabasalt association shows various migmatite structures such as metatexites, metatexite-diatexite transitions and massive diatexites that have formed in response to the weakening of the crust, melt segregation, extraction, migration and redistribution (SEMR) processes, and synanatectic strain. Rafts of the metabasalts probably represent the remnants of a basaltic upper ‘lid’ layer. We interpret the Lake Inari terrain to represent a widespread migmatization in deeper layers of an overthickened basaltic plateau persisting above a mantle plume, consistent with a stagnant or sluggish lid tectonic setting. Our results suggest that the formation of buoyant TTGs by partial melting of plateau basalts might have set off the evolution of continents. Peer reviewed
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
genre Arctic
Fennoscandia
Inari
Northern Finland
Lapland
genre_facet Arctic
Fennoscandia
Inari
Northern Finland
Lapland
geographic Arctic
Inari
geographic_facet Arctic
Inari
id ftunivhelsihelda:oai:helda.helsinki.fi:10138/577485
institution Open Polar
language English
long_lat ENVELOPE(27.029,27.029,68.906,68.906)
op_collection_id ftunivhelsihelda
op_relation 10.1016/j.precamres.2024.107407
We greatly acknowledge the support from the Geological Survey of Finland and funding from the K.H. Renlund foundation. We are thankful to Pentti H\u00F6ltt\u00E4, the father of the idea to study the Lake Inari area, for his encouragement to take the action in the field. We express our especially warm thanks to Janne Henttunen ( 1975\u20132010 ), who was a warm-hearted and helpful young fisherman of the Lake Inari . Knowing the lake like the back of his hand, he helped us with navigation and worried about of our safety in sometimes harsh boating conditions on the lake during our very first field work periods. We are most grateful for Pekka Kivim\u00E4ki whose excellent skills in skippering the boat, maintaining the research camp, sampling outcrops, and photographing the research material made this project possible. Anja Arkonsuo is warmly thanked for her invaluable role in the field work and petrographic investigations. We are also thankful for Satu and Ville Kurunsaari for kindly taking care of our boating and camping logistics, which enabled our latest visit to the research area in summer 2023. We thank two anonymous reviewers who helped us to crystallize our thoughts and significantly improve this manuscript. Finally, we are grateful for the Kilpisj\u00E4rvi Biological Sation for providing a splendid environment for discussions and writing in Finnish Lapland.
http://hdl.handle.net/10138/577485
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spelling ftunivhelsihelda:oai:helda.helsinki.fi:10138/577485 2025-03-02T15:23:05+00:00 On the origin of Archaean TTGs by migmatization of mantle plume-related metabasalts : Insights from the Lake Inari terrain, Arctic Fennoscandia Halla, Jaana Joshi, Kumar Batuk Luttinen, Arto Heilimo, Esa Kurhila, Matti Finnish Museum of Natural History 2024-06-18T13:13:03Z 18 application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/10138/577485 eng eng Elsevier B.V. 10.1016/j.precamres.2024.107407 We greatly acknowledge the support from the Geological Survey of Finland and funding from the K.H. Renlund foundation. We are thankful to Pentti H\u00F6ltt\u00E4, the father of the idea to study the Lake Inari area, for his encouragement to take the action in the field. We express our especially warm thanks to Janne Henttunen ( 1975\u20132010 ), who was a warm-hearted and helpful young fisherman of the Lake Inari . Knowing the lake like the back of his hand, he helped us with navigation and worried about of our safety in sometimes harsh boating conditions on the lake during our very first field work periods. We are most grateful for Pekka Kivim\u00E4ki whose excellent skills in skippering the boat, maintaining the research camp, sampling outcrops, and photographing the research material made this project possible. Anja Arkonsuo is warmly thanked for her invaluable role in the field work and petrographic investigations. We are also thankful for Satu and Ville Kurunsaari for kindly taking care of our boating and camping logistics, which enabled our latest visit to the research area in summer 2023. We thank two anonymous reviewers who helped us to crystallize our thoughts and significantly improve this manuscript. Finally, we are grateful for the Kilpisj\u00E4rvi Biological Sation for providing a splendid environment for discussions and writing in Finnish Lapland. http://hdl.handle.net/10138/577485 85192437373 001240070100001 cc_by info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess openAccess Archaean Diatexite Metabasalt Metatexite Partial melting Tonalite-trondhjemite-granodiorite Geosciences Article publishedVersion 2024 ftunivhelsihelda 2025-02-03T01:46:39Z The conversion of basaltic crust into a thick, buoyant felsic crust of tonalite-trondhjemite-granodiorite (TTG) composition has been a fundamental process in the Earth's evolution during the Archaean Eon (4.03–2.50 Ga). The proposition that TTGs have formed as a result of the partial melting of hydrated mafic rocks is now well corroborated by geochemical modelling and experimental methods although these processes have only rarely been tested or documented by field studies. Here, we investigate the migmatite structures and major and trace element geochemistry of the 2.9–2.6 Ga Lake Inari TTG-metabasalt terrain in northern Finland, in the Lapland-Kola Province of Arctic Fennoscandia. The Lake Inari metabasalts geochemically resemble the flood basalts of the Phanerozoic oceanic plateaus. The TTGs show overall high Si and Na/K characteristics and have two coeval and intermingled geochemical endmembers, the low-HREE and high-HREE TTGs. Their variable geochemical signatures may reflect internal magmatic processes such as mingling of magmas that have experienced different evolutionary paths in terms of source mineralogy, degree of partial melting, differentiation and migration. The bimodal TTG-metabasalt association shows various migmatite structures such as metatexites, metatexite-diatexite transitions and massive diatexites that have formed in response to the weakening of the crust, melt segregation, extraction, migration and redistribution (SEMR) processes, and synanatectic strain. Rafts of the metabasalts probably represent the remnants of a basaltic upper ‘lid’ layer. We interpret the Lake Inari terrain to represent a widespread migmatization in deeper layers of an overthickened basaltic plateau persisting above a mantle plume, consistent with a stagnant or sluggish lid tectonic setting. Our results suggest that the formation of buoyant TTGs by partial melting of plateau basalts might have set off the evolution of continents. Peer reviewed Article in Journal/Newspaper Arctic Fennoscandia Inari Northern Finland Lapland HELDA – University of Helsinki Open Repository Arctic Inari ENVELOPE(27.029,27.029,68.906,68.906)
spellingShingle Archaean
Diatexite
Metabasalt
Metatexite
Partial melting
Tonalite-trondhjemite-granodiorite
Geosciences
Halla, Jaana
Joshi, Kumar Batuk
Luttinen, Arto
Heilimo, Esa
Kurhila, Matti
On the origin of Archaean TTGs by migmatization of mantle plume-related metabasalts : Insights from the Lake Inari terrain, Arctic Fennoscandia
title On the origin of Archaean TTGs by migmatization of mantle plume-related metabasalts : Insights from the Lake Inari terrain, Arctic Fennoscandia
title_full On the origin of Archaean TTGs by migmatization of mantle plume-related metabasalts : Insights from the Lake Inari terrain, Arctic Fennoscandia
title_fullStr On the origin of Archaean TTGs by migmatization of mantle plume-related metabasalts : Insights from the Lake Inari terrain, Arctic Fennoscandia
title_full_unstemmed On the origin of Archaean TTGs by migmatization of mantle plume-related metabasalts : Insights from the Lake Inari terrain, Arctic Fennoscandia
title_short On the origin of Archaean TTGs by migmatization of mantle plume-related metabasalts : Insights from the Lake Inari terrain, Arctic Fennoscandia
title_sort on the origin of archaean ttgs by migmatization of mantle plume-related metabasalts : insights from the lake inari terrain, arctic fennoscandia
topic Archaean
Diatexite
Metabasalt
Metatexite
Partial melting
Tonalite-trondhjemite-granodiorite
Geosciences
topic_facet Archaean
Diatexite
Metabasalt
Metatexite
Partial melting
Tonalite-trondhjemite-granodiorite
Geosciences
url http://hdl.handle.net/10138/577485