4.4 Article

Detrital Zircons Reveal Evidence of Hadean Crust in the Singhbhum Craton, India

Journal

JOURNAL OF GEOLOGY
Volume 126, Issue 5, Pages 541-552

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UNIV CHICAGO PRESS
DOI: 10.1086/698844

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The Singhbhum craton is one of five Archean cratons constituting the Indian subcontinent. It consists of four major lithotectonic units with broadly defined ages from Eoarchean to Neoarchean: the Older Metamorphic Group (3.7-3.2 Ga), Older Metamorphic Tonalite Gneisses (3.8-3.1 Ga), Singhbhum Granite (3.5-3.0 Ga), and Iron Ore Group (3.51-2.55 Ga). In this study, 270 zircons were separated from modern sediment of the Baitarani River, which is wholly contained within the craton. Zircons were analyzed with laser ablation ICP-MS for their U-Pb systematics; >50% were less than 5% discordant. Three primary age groupings account for approximate to 98% of analyses: 3.62-3.55 Ga (5%), 3.50-3.22 Ga (87%), and 3.10-3.06 Ga (6%). The preponderance of 3.50-3.22 Ga zircons is consistent with the local basement that includes a 3.47 Ga tonalite gneiss enclave within a 3.35-3.30 Ga outcrop of the Singhbhum Granite near Keonjhar. Lu-Hf systematics of zircons yielded 67% with positive initial epsilon Hf scattered above and below the mantle growth curve and 33% with negative initial epsilon Hf, indicating contributions from both depleted mantle and older crustal sources. Single-stage model ages range from 4.29 to 3.10 Ga. Of note is a single zircon with a Pb-207/Pb-206 age of 4015 +/- 9 Ma (1.3% discordant), which is the first Hadean zircon documented from any of the Indian cratons. This grain yielded an initial epsilon Hf of -5.30, which indicates an episode of Hadean felsic crust formation in the Singhbhum craton comparable to that proposed for the Jack Hills of the Yilgarn craton (Australia).

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