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Peninsular India in Gondwana: The tectonothermal evolution of the Southern Granulite Terrain and its Gondwanan counterparts

Journal

GONDWANA RESEARCH
Volume 25, Issue 1, Pages 190-203

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.gr.2013.01.002

Keywords

Gondwana; Southern Granulite Terrane; India; Neoproterozoic; Ediacaran

Funding

  1. Australian government [ST030046]
  2. Indian government [ST030046]
  3. Australian Research Council [FT120100340, DP0879330, DE120103067]
  4. Australian Research Council [DP0879330, DE120103067] Funding Source: Australian Research Council

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Peninsular India forms a keystone in Gondwana, linking the East African and Malagasy orogens with Ediacaran-Cambrian orogenic belts in Sri Lanka and the Lutzow Holm Bay region of Antarctica with similar aged belts in Mozambique, Malawi and Zambia. Ediacaran-Cambrian metamorphism and deformation in the Southern Granulite Terrane (SGT) reflect the past tectonic setting of this region as the leading vertex of Neoproterozoic India as it collided with Azania, the Congo-Tanzania-Bangweulu Block and Kalahari on one side and the Australia/Mawson continent on the other. The high-grade terranes of southern India are made up of four main tectonic units; from north to south these are a) the Salem Block, b) the Madurai Block, c) the Trivandrum Block, and d) the Nagercoil Block. The Salem Block is essentially the metamorphosed Dharwar craton and is bound to the south by the Palghat-Cauvery shear system - here interpreted as a terrane boundary and the Mozambique Ocean suture. The Madurai Block is interpreted as a continuation of the Antananarivo Block (and overlying Palaeoproterozoic sedimentary sequence - the Item Group) of Madagascar and a part of the Neoproterozoic microcontinent Azania. The boundary between this and the Trivandrum Block is the Achankovil Zone, that here is not interpreted as a terrane boundary, but may represent an Ediacaran rift zone reactivated in latest Ediacaran-Cambrian times. (C) 2013 International Association for Gondwana Research. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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