The nature of the basement in the Archaean Dharwar craton of southern India and the age of the Peninsular Gneiss

Naha, K. ; Srinivasan, R. ; Gopalan, K. ; Pantulu, G. V. C. ; Subba Rao, M. V. ; Vrevsky, A. B. ; Bogomolov, Ye. S. (1993) The nature of the basement in the Archaean Dharwar craton of southern India and the age of the Peninsular Gneiss Proceedings of the Indian Academy of Sciences - Earth and Planetary Sciences, 102 (4). pp. 547-565. ISSN 0253-4126

[img]
Preview
PDF - Publisher Version
983kB

Official URL: http://www.ias.ac.in/j_archive/epsci/102/4/547-565...

Related URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/BF02871953

Abstract

The Archaean Peninsular Gneiss of southern India is considered by a number of workers to be the basement upon which the Dharwar supracrustal rocks were deposited. However, the Peninsular Gneiss in its present state is a composite gneiss formed by synkinematic migmatization during successive episodes of folding (DhF1, DhF1a and DhF2) that affected the Dharwar supracrustal rocks. An even earlier phase of migmatization and deformation (DhF) is evident from relict fabrics in small enclaves of gneissic tonalites and amphibolites within the Peninsular Gneiss. We consider these enclaves to represent the original basement for the Dharwar supracrustal rocks. Tonalitic pebbles in conglomerates of the Dharwar Supergroup confirm the inference that the supracrustal rocks were deposited on a gneissic basement. Whole rock Rb-Sr ages of gneisses showing only the DhF1 structures fall in the range of 3100-3200 Ma. Where the later deformation (DhF2) has been associated with considerable recrystallization, the Rb-Sr ages are between 2500 Ma and 2700 Ma. Significantly, a new Rb-Sr analysis of tonalitic gneiss pebbles in the Kaldurga conglomerate of the Dharwar sequence is consistent with an age of ~2500 Ma and not that of 3300 Ma reported earlier by Venkatasubramanian and Narayanaswamy (1974). Pb-Pb ages based on direct evaporation of detrital zircon grains from the metasedimentary rocks of the Dharwar sequence fall into two groups, 3300-3100 Ma, and 2800-3000 Ma. Stratigraphic, structural, textural and geochronologic data, therefore, indicate that the Peninsular Gneiss of the Dharwar craton evolved over a protracted period of time ranging from > 3300 Ma to 2500 Ma.

Item Type:Article
Source:Copyright of this article belongs to Indian Academy of Sciences.
Keywords:Archaean; Peninsular Gneiss; Structural History; Basement-cover Problem; Rb-Sr and Zircon Pb-isotope Geochronology
ID Code:13569
Deposited On:12 Nov 2010 15:19
Last Modified:16 May 2016 22:43

Repository Staff Only: item control page