Review of the Isua supracrustal belt area (Greenland) Eoarchean geology from integrated 1:20,000 scale maps, field observations and laboratory data: Constraints on early geodynamics

In the early 1970s, Vic McGregor and Stephen Moorbath demonstrated that the Isua supracrustal belt (Greenland) and its surrounding orthogneisses formed in the Eoarchean (Moorbath et al., 1972, 1973). Fifty years later, these rocks are a key resource globally for understanding the Eoarchean Earth. Th...

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Published in:Precambrian Research
Main Authors: Nutman, Allen P., Friend, Clark R.L., Bennett, Vickie C., Yi, Keewook, Van Kranendonk, Martin
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Research Online 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ro.uow.edu.au/test2021/5486
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.precamres.2022.106785
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spelling ftunivwollongong:oai:ro.uow.edu.au:test2021-11033 2023-05-15T16:28:29+02:00 Review of the Isua supracrustal belt area (Greenland) Eoarchean geology from integrated 1:20,000 scale maps, field observations and laboratory data: Constraints on early geodynamics Nutman, Allen P. Friend, Clark R.L. Bennett, Vickie C. Yi, Keewook Van Kranendonk, Martin 2022-09-01T07:00:00Z https://ro.uow.edu.au/test2021/5486 https://doi.org/10.1016/j.precamres.2022.106785 unknown Research Online https://ro.uow.edu.au/test2021/5486 https://doi.org/10.1016/j.precamres.2022.106785 Test Series for Scopus Harvesting 2021 Crustal evolution Eoarchean Isua supracrustal belt Plate tectonics text 2022 ftunivwollongong https://doi.org/10.1016/j.precamres.2022.106785 2022-09-05T22:23:40Z In the early 1970s, Vic McGregor and Stephen Moorbath demonstrated that the Isua supracrustal belt (Greenland) and its surrounding orthogneisses formed in the Eoarchean (Moorbath et al., 1972, 1973). Fifty years later, these rocks are a key resource globally for understanding the Eoarchean Earth. This is because there is an extensive area (∼200 km2) of abundant outcrops where superimposed Neoarchean strain is modest, and Neoarchean metamorphism was only at lowest amphibolite facies; these are low tectonothermal conditions compared with other Eoarchean crustal remnants globally. Therefore, this region can provide the clearest window onto early Earth geodynamics. Within the Isua supracrustal belt there are rare areas where Eoarchean strain is also low, and these areas provide unambiguous recognition of diverse lithologies including sedimentary carbonates with the oldest proposed but contested stromatolites, pillow lavas, volcano-sedimentary lithologies and ultramafic rocks derived from layered intrusions (accepted) and slivers of mantle-derived meta-serpentinite that underwent Eoarchean ultra-high-pressure metamorphism (contested). As explored in previous papers (e.g., Polat et al., 2002), the geochemical signatures of the mafic igneous rocks, which include a boninite-like suite, indicate their magmas were derived by fluid fluxing of peridotites. Radiogenic isotopic signatures define discrete pulses of Eoarchean juvenile crustal growth, until a tectonic event at ∼3660 Ma with high pressure metamorphism that was followed by a switch to crustal recycling with the production of granites sensu stricto. Our appraisal of the integrated evidence points to complex superimposed Eoarchean events (∼3820–3600 Ma) driven by lateral lithosphere movements in convergent boundary settings, rather than a single crustal overturn such as within a model heat-pipe scenario. Text Greenland University of Wollongong, Australia: Research Online Greenland Precambrian Research 379 106785
institution Open Polar
collection University of Wollongong, Australia: Research Online
op_collection_id ftunivwollongong
language unknown
topic Crustal evolution
Eoarchean
Isua supracrustal belt
Plate tectonics
spellingShingle Crustal evolution
Eoarchean
Isua supracrustal belt
Plate tectonics
Nutman, Allen P.
Friend, Clark R.L.
Bennett, Vickie C.
Yi, Keewook
Van Kranendonk, Martin
Review of the Isua supracrustal belt area (Greenland) Eoarchean geology from integrated 1:20,000 scale maps, field observations and laboratory data: Constraints on early geodynamics
topic_facet Crustal evolution
Eoarchean
Isua supracrustal belt
Plate tectonics
description In the early 1970s, Vic McGregor and Stephen Moorbath demonstrated that the Isua supracrustal belt (Greenland) and its surrounding orthogneisses formed in the Eoarchean (Moorbath et al., 1972, 1973). Fifty years later, these rocks are a key resource globally for understanding the Eoarchean Earth. This is because there is an extensive area (∼200 km2) of abundant outcrops where superimposed Neoarchean strain is modest, and Neoarchean metamorphism was only at lowest amphibolite facies; these are low tectonothermal conditions compared with other Eoarchean crustal remnants globally. Therefore, this region can provide the clearest window onto early Earth geodynamics. Within the Isua supracrustal belt there are rare areas where Eoarchean strain is also low, and these areas provide unambiguous recognition of diverse lithologies including sedimentary carbonates with the oldest proposed but contested stromatolites, pillow lavas, volcano-sedimentary lithologies and ultramafic rocks derived from layered intrusions (accepted) and slivers of mantle-derived meta-serpentinite that underwent Eoarchean ultra-high-pressure metamorphism (contested). As explored in previous papers (e.g., Polat et al., 2002), the geochemical signatures of the mafic igneous rocks, which include a boninite-like suite, indicate their magmas were derived by fluid fluxing of peridotites. Radiogenic isotopic signatures define discrete pulses of Eoarchean juvenile crustal growth, until a tectonic event at ∼3660 Ma with high pressure metamorphism that was followed by a switch to crustal recycling with the production of granites sensu stricto. Our appraisal of the integrated evidence points to complex superimposed Eoarchean events (∼3820–3600 Ma) driven by lateral lithosphere movements in convergent boundary settings, rather than a single crustal overturn such as within a model heat-pipe scenario.
format Text
author Nutman, Allen P.
Friend, Clark R.L.
Bennett, Vickie C.
Yi, Keewook
Van Kranendonk, Martin
author_facet Nutman, Allen P.
Friend, Clark R.L.
Bennett, Vickie C.
Yi, Keewook
Van Kranendonk, Martin
author_sort Nutman, Allen P.
title Review of the Isua supracrustal belt area (Greenland) Eoarchean geology from integrated 1:20,000 scale maps, field observations and laboratory data: Constraints on early geodynamics
title_short Review of the Isua supracrustal belt area (Greenland) Eoarchean geology from integrated 1:20,000 scale maps, field observations and laboratory data: Constraints on early geodynamics
title_full Review of the Isua supracrustal belt area (Greenland) Eoarchean geology from integrated 1:20,000 scale maps, field observations and laboratory data: Constraints on early geodynamics
title_fullStr Review of the Isua supracrustal belt area (Greenland) Eoarchean geology from integrated 1:20,000 scale maps, field observations and laboratory data: Constraints on early geodynamics
title_full_unstemmed Review of the Isua supracrustal belt area (Greenland) Eoarchean geology from integrated 1:20,000 scale maps, field observations and laboratory data: Constraints on early geodynamics
title_sort review of the isua supracrustal belt area (greenland) eoarchean geology from integrated 1:20,000 scale maps, field observations and laboratory data: constraints on early geodynamics
publisher Research Online
publishDate 2022
url https://ro.uow.edu.au/test2021/5486
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.precamres.2022.106785
geographic Greenland
geographic_facet Greenland
genre Greenland
genre_facet Greenland
op_source Test Series for Scopus Harvesting 2021
op_relation https://ro.uow.edu.au/test2021/5486
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.precamres.2022.106785
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container_title Precambrian Research
container_volume 379
container_start_page 106785
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