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Petrogenesis and U[sbnd]Pb geochronology of charnockites flanking the Pranhita Godavari rift in peninsular India-link between the Bastar and Eastern Dharwar Cratons.

Authors :
Meshram, Tushar
Dora, M. Lachhana
Baswani, Srinivasa R.
Upadhyay, Dewashish
Meshram, Rajkumar
Randive, Kirtikumar
Ranjan, Sameer
Nanda, Jayanta K.
Source :
Gondwana Research; Apr2021, Vol. 92, p113-132, 20p
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Charnockites constitute an integral component of granulite belts exposed on the northern and southern flanks of the Godavari rift, which marks the contact between the Bastar and Eastern Dharwar cratons in peninsular India. In this study, we attempt to constrain the petrogenesis of granulites from Gondpipri, Bhopalpatnam on the northern flank and Karimnagar on the southern flank of the Pranhita-Godavari valley using petrography, mineral and whole-rock geochemistry, fluid inclusion studies, and U Pb zircon geochronology. The presence of relict magmatic textures and orthopyroxene chemistry is suggestive of an igneous protolith while CO 2 -rich fluid inclusions in quartz correspond to subsequent granulite-facies overprint. Geochemically, charnockites from both granulite belts are metaluminous, magnesian, and calc-alkaline, having similar Sr and Y concentrations, Rb/Sr, Sr/Y, La N /Sm N , Gd N /Yb N , and Eu/Eu* ratios, and positive Ba Pb and negative Nb-Ta-Ti anomalies. Zircons in charnockites from both granulite belts furnish magmatic crystallization ages of ~2.5 Ga (U Pb isotope) and also record a metamorphic overprint at ca. 2473 Ma. The similarity in protolith composition and U Pb ages of zircons in charnockites on the northern and southern flanks of the Godavari rift suggest that they constitute a cogenetic and coeval suite emplaced at ~2.5 Ga in an undivided and continuous Palaeo-Mesoarchean landmass that included the Bastar and Eastern Dharwar cratons, possibly as a part of the Ur-supercontinent. This undivided landmass subsequently got split along the Pranhita-Godavari rift zone into the Bastar and Dharwar cratons. The rift valley eventually developed into a sedimentary basin hosting the Proterozoic and Gondwana Group of sediments sequentially, apparently separating the two cratons on the map. Unlabelled Image • The Neoarchean crustal accretion due to juvenile granite magmatism was related to plume activity. • The Bastar and Karimnagar granulite belts are ramifications of same 2.4 Ga tectonothermal event. • The Bastar and the Eastern Dharwar Cratons represent remnants of the erstwhile Ur Supercontinent. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1342937X
Volume :
92
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Gondwana Research
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
148860405
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gr.2020.12.024