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Geophysical evidence for doming during the Pan-African/Brasiliano orogeny in the Seridó belt, Borborema Province, Brazil

Authors :
Roberto Gusmão de Oliveira
Walter E. Medeiros
Nitzschia Regina Rodrigues Domingos
Source :
Precambrian Research. 350:105870
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2020.

Abstract

The Neoproterozoic Serido belt located in the Borborema Province, NE Brazil, was deformed and metamorphosed in the Pan-African/Brasiliano orogeny. The basement rocks of the belt were submitted to intense partial melting to form dome-like structures as documented in the Santa Luzia anatetic dome. The aeromagnetic map of the Serido belt shows a long-wavelength anomaly with elongated sigmoidal shape, whose limits coincide with shear zones. Comparison with gravity data shows that both anomalies share common sources, which are felsic rocks more magnetic and less dense than the surrounding crust. Correlation with geology shows that the geophysical anomalies are associated with magnetite-rich migmatites and granites. We modelled the geophysical datasets using magnetic susceptibility and density values from measurements in cores of a stratigraphic borehole. The results are consistent with a migmatite-dome system formed in the south-central part of the belt. This large-scale crustal structure is composed of elongated internal domes, which were geophysically modelled as four anomalous bodies, that resulted from partial melting of rocks mostly of the basement. The anomalies define an elongated migmatite-dome system with the main axis in the NNE-SSW direction that progressively bends to E-W approaching to the Patos shear zone, thus indicating that this shear zone had a key role in shaping the domic structure. The migmatitic domes of the Serido belt compose a fault-related dome system, formed in association with the broad strike-slip shear zone array of the Patos-Serido system, which evolved through the crustal extrusion resulting from the continental collisions that amalgamated West Gondwana in the Ediacaran.

Details

ISSN :
03019268
Volume :
350
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Precambrian Research
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........dd1882db3e6766aaeef62929e6c90b6d
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.precamres.2020.105870