4.7 Article

The Bi'r Umq-Nakasib suture zone in the arabian-nubian shield: A key to understanding crustal growth in the East African Orogen

Journal

GONDWANA RESEARCH
Volume 6, Issue 3, Pages 523-530

Publisher

INT ASSOC GONDWANA RESEARCH
DOI: 10.1016/S1342-937X(05)71003-0

Keywords

Arabian-Nubian shield; Neoproterozoic; suture; terrane amalgamation; ophiolite

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The Bi'r Umq-Nakasib suture zone, 5-65 km wide and over 600 km long, consists of highly deformed ophiolite nappes and metavolcanic, metasedimentary, and intrusive rocks contained in one of the longest ophiolite-decorated shear zones in the Arabian-Nubian Shield. The rocks originated in a variety of juvenile oceanic environments and include assemblages formed in mid-ocean-ridge, subduction-zone, passive-margin, and continental-slope settings., Dating of the ophiolites, volcanic rocks, and pre- and syntectonic plutons indicates that oceanic magmatism in the region was active similar to870-830 Ma whereas suturing occurred similar to780-760 Ma. This chronology suggests that suturing involved the closure of a relatively long-lived oceanic basin and makes the Bi'r Umq-Nakasib shear zone the oldest accretionary structure known among the juvenile Neoproterozoic rocks of the northern East African Orogen. Creation of the shear zone dates the onset of arc-arc convergence in what eventually became the Arabian-Nubian shield, and marks the beginning of the complex, heterogeneous process of terrane amalgamation and continental accretion that led to the eventual accretion of East and West Gondwana.

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