4.5 Article

The extension of the Transscandinavian Igneous Belt into the Baltic Sea region

Journal

PRECAMBRIAN RESEARCH
Volume 328, Issue -, Pages 287-308

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.precamres.2019.04.016

Keywords

Baltic Sea; Precambrian; Geochronology; Geochemistry; Transscandinavian Igneous Belt; Fennoscandian Shield

Funding

  1. Finnish Society of Sciences and Letters

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Geological investigations of the Precambrian crystalline basement in the Baltic Sea region have been performed on five samples from drill cores or percussion drill fragments collected from 0.2 to 2.5 km depths. The samples were analyzed for geochemistry and dated with the U-Pb zircon methods using SIMS or LA-ICP-MS techniques. A coarse-grained K-feldspar-bearing granitoid at Frigsarve, southern Gotland, has an age of 1845 +/- 4 Ma, and can be correlated with the TIB 0 generation of the Transscandinavian Igneous Belt (TIB). The U-Pb age of a quartz monzodiorite at Bifida Hamn, northern Oland, was determined to 1799 +/- 4 Ma, while a quartz monzonite at Valsnas, central Oland, yielded 1788 +/- 5 Ma; both rocks showing geochemical affinities to the TIB. The Boda Hamn quartz monzodiorite is correlated with the TIB la generation while the Valsnas quartz monzonite is correlated with the TIB lb generation. The U-Pb ages of granodiorites in the E7-1 and D1-1 drill holes offshore Latvia and Lithuania are 1764 +/- 7 Ma and 1744 +/- 7 Ma, respectively. Both rocks can be correlated with orthogneisses of the Blekinge Province in southern Sweden as well as orthogneisses in northern Poland. A review of previous correlations of the Precambrian crust in the Baltic Sea region suggests that five crustal units, formed in accretionary environments in the time period from 1.90 to 1.75 Ga, extend from the Fennoscandian Shield in SE Sweden into the Baltic Sea region. The northern part of the Baltic Sea region is dominated by the 1.90-1.87 Ga Svecofennian units continuing into the Precambrian basement beneath Estonia and Latvia. The oldest generation of the Transscandinavian Igneous Belt (TIB 0) can be followed from Askersund in south-central Sweden, via southern Gotland to northwestern Lithuania. The TIB 1 comprises three subunits (TIB 1a-c) which dominate the southwestern parts of the East European Craton from the Svecofennian Domain to the Tornqvist zone.

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