4.7 Article

Mesoarchean accretionary melange and tectonic erosion in the Archean Dharwar Craton, southern India: Plate tectonics in the early Earth

Journal

GONDWANA RESEARCH
Volume 85, Issue -, Pages 291-305

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.gr.2020.05.004

Keywords

Zircon geochronology; Accretionary orogen; Archean crustal evolution; Sargur group; Dharwar craton

Funding

  1. Foreign Expert grants from China University of Geosciences Beijing, China

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Accretionary orogens are hallmarks of subduction tectonics along convergent plate margins. Here we report a sequence of low-grade metasediments carrying exhumed blocks of ultramafic, mafic and felsic rocks from Sargur in the Western Dharwar Craton in India. These rocks occur along the southern domain of the Chitradurga Suture Zone, which marks the boundary between the Western and Central Dharwar Cratons and thus provide a window to explore Archean convergent margin processes. We present zircon U-Pb and Lu-Hf data from Sargur metasediments including quartz mica schist, fine-grained quartzite, and pelitic schist, as well as from blocks/layers of trondhjemite, garnet amphibolite, and chromite-bearing serpentinite occurring within the metasedimentary accretionary belt. The detrital zircon grains from the metasediments show multiple age groups, with the oldest age as 3482 Ma and an age peak at 2862 Ma. Magmatic zircons in trondhjemite show Pb-207/Pb-206 weighted mean age of ca. 2972 Ma, whereas those in the chromite-bearing serpentinite display multiple age populations of ca. 2896, 2750, 2648, 2566 and 2463 Ma, tracing zircon crystallization in an evolving mantle wedge adjacent to a subducting oceanic plate. Metamorphism is dated as ca. 2444 Ma from zircon grains in the garnet amphibolite. Zircon epsilon Hf(t) in the mafic-ultramafic rocks and trondhjemite are mostly positive, suggesting a juvenile (depleted mantle) source. The detrital zircon Lu-Hf data suggest that the sediment source involved Paleoarchean juvenile and reworked components. Based on our findings, we propose that the Sargur sequence represents an accretionary melange which forms part of a major Mesoarchean accretionary orogen that witnessed multiple stages of tectonic erosion at least during three periods at ca. 3200-3000 Ma, 3000-2800 Ma and 2800-2500 Ma removing a large part of the accretionary prismalong the convergent margin. We correlate the processes with prolonged subduction-accretion cycle culminating in the final collision between the Western and Central Dharwar cratonic blocks. (C) 2020 International Association for Gondwana Research. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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