4.7 Article

Titanite petrochronology linked to phase equilibrium modelling constrains tectono-thermal events in the Akia Terrane, West Greenland

Journal

CHEMICAL GEOLOGY
Volume 536, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.chemgeo.2020.119467

Keywords

Titanite; Geochronology; Phase equilibrium; Ti-in-zircon; Petrochronology

Funding

  1. Australian Geophysical Observing System (AGOS) grant by the AQ44 Australian Education Investment Fund
  2. Ministry of Mineral Resources, Government of Greenland

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The Mesoarchean Akia Terrane in West Greenland contains a detailed magmatic and metamorphic mineral growth record from 3.2 Ga to at least c. 2.5 Ga. This time span makes this region an important case study in the quest to track secular changes in geodynamic style which may ultimately inform on the development of plate tectonics as a globally linked system of lateral rigid plate motions. The common accessory mineral titanite has recently become recognised as a powerful high temperature geochronometer whose chemistry may chart the thermal conditions of its growth. Furthermore, titanite offers the potential to record the time-temperature history of mafic lithologies, which may lack zircon. Although titanite suffers from higher levels of common Pb than many other U-Pb chronometers, we show how measurement of Pb-207/Pb-206 in texturally coeval biotite may assist in the characterization of the appropriate common Pb composition in titanite. Titanite extracted from two samples of mafic gneisses from the Akia Terrane both yield U-Pb ages of c. 2.54 Ga. Although coeval, their chemistry implies growth under two distinctly different processes. In one case, the titanite has elevated total REE, high Th/U and grew from an in-situ partial melt, consistent with an identical date to granite dyke zircon. In contrast, the second titanite sample contains greater common Pb, lower total REE, lower Th/U, and grew from dominantly hydrothermal fluids. Zr-in-titanite thermometry for partial melt-derived titanite, with activities constrained by phase equilibrium modelling, indicates maxima of c. 690 degrees C. Elsewhere in the Akia Terrane, coeval metamorphism linked to growth of hydrothermal titanite is estimated at temperatures of c. 670 degrees C. These new results when coupled with existing findings indicate punctuated, repeated metamorphic events in the Akia Terrane, in which high temperature conditions (re)occurred at least three times between 3.0 and 2.5 Ga, but crucially changed in style across a c. 3.0 Ga change point We interpret this change in metamorphism as reflecting a fundamental shift in geodynamic style in West Greenland at 3.0 Ga, consistent with other estimates for the onset of widespread plate tectonic-type processes.

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