DEGEO - Departamento de Geologia

URI permanente desta comunidadehttp://www.hml.repositorio.ufop.br/handle/123456789/8

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Resultados da Pesquisa

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    Magmatic diversity in continental rifts : a case study on the Early Tonian, plutono-volcanic Salto da Divisa Complex, Araçuaí Orogen, Eastern Brazil.
    (2022) Victoria, Anderson Magalhães; Soares, Antônio Carlos Pedrosa; Cruz, Simone Cerqueira Pereira; Lana, Cristiano de Carvalho; Dantas, Elton Luiz; Dussin, Ivo Antonio; Borges, Ramon
    Exposures from plutonic roots to volcanic roofs in deeply eroded regions may disclose the architecture and igneous processes in ancient metamagmatic edifices, like it is the Early Tonian Salto da Divisa Complex (SADICO) of Eastern Brazil. Field, petrographic, lithochemical and isotopic (in-zircon U-Pb and Lu-Hf, and whole-rock Sm-Nd) studies were conducted on the SADICO, an anorogenic plutono-volcanic complex located in the northeast Araçuaí orogen. The SADICO magmatic record comprises (with U-Pb crystallization ages, and isotopic Hf and Nd data): i) pyroxenite (εNd(t): +2.2 to −5.3; Nd TDM: 1.2–1.7 Ga); ii) mafic-intermediate dykes (εNd(t):+2.1 to −5.9; Nd TDM: 1.2–1.8 Ga) and enclaves with OIB-like signature; ii) ferroan, A-type granitoid with mafic-felsic mingling-mixing features (885 ± 9 Ma; εHf(t): −5 to −7, Hf TDM: 2.0–2.1 Ga; εNd(t): −3.2 to −4.3, Nd TDM: 1.5–1.7 Ga); iii) fluorite-bearing, metaluminous to peraluminous, ferroan A-type granites, including biotite-amphibole granite (915 to 875 Ma; εNd(t): −2.8 to −5.8, Nd TDM: 1.6–1.9 Ga), biotite granite (894 ± 10, εHf(t): −4 to −11, Hf TDM: 1.9–2.3 Ga; εNd(t): −1.6 to −8.0, Nd TDM: 1.4–2.2 Ga), and amazonite-bearing two-mica granite (εNd(t): −4.0; Nd TDM: 1.7 Ga); iv) rhyolite (905 ± 24 Ma; εHf(t): −1 to −8.7, Hf TDM: 1.8–2.2 Ga; εNd(t): +3.1, Nd TDM: 1.1 Ga) and subvolcanic silica-undersaturated trachyte (912 ± 13 Ma, εHf(t): −14 to −18, Hf TDM: 2.5–2.7 Ga; εNd(t): +0.3, Nd TDM: 1.2 Ga), also with ferroan A-type signature. Our integrated petrogenetic model envisages mantle-derived magmas (ultramafic and mafic rocks) evolved by assimilation-fractional crystallization to felsic subvolcanic and volcanic rocks, interacting with granitic magmas produced by crustal anatexis (biotite-amphibole granite) and subsequently fractionated (biotite granite) and highly fractionated (two-mica granite) with the involvement of F-rich fluids up to subvolcanic levels.
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    Record of Early Tonian mafic magmatism in the central Espinhaço (Brazil) : new insights for break-up of the Neoproterozoic landmass ancestor of São Francisco-Congo paleocontinent.
    (2020) Moreira, Helen Fonseca; Danderfer Filho, André; Costa, Alice Fernanda de Oliveira; Bersan, Samuel Moreira; Lana, Cristiano de Carvalho; Queiroga, Gláucia Nascimento
    Petrological characterization, U–Pb geochronology, Lu–Hf analyses and major and trace element data from mafic intrusions in the Central Espinhaço (central portion of the Brazilian shield) are used here to investigate the geological significance of the Early Neoproterozoic magmatism in the context of the S~ao Francisco-Congo paleocontinent. These mafic bodies are represented by medium to coarse-grained metagabbros with plagioclase, amphibole and clinopyroxene. Zircon U–Pb isotopic data from two samples yielded weighted mean 206Pb/238U ages of 895 3.4 Ma (MSWD ¼ 1.7) and 896 2.4 Ma (MSWD ¼ 0.64), regarded as the best estimates for the crystallization age of these mafic rocks. Major and trace element data (including REEs) show that the gabbros originated from a subalkaline tholeiitic magma, typical of intraplate magmatism. Such rocks are slightly enriched in LREEs and LILEs and depleted in HFSEs. Our new isotope and geochemical data, along with regional knowledge, indicate that these metagabbros mark the beginning of an important Tonian-age extensional tectonic event of the landmass of which the S~ao Francisco-Congo paleocontinent was part (Rodinia supercontinent or Central African block?). We furthermore suggest that these rocks belong to a prominent suite of Tonian-age mafic rocks that mark a diachronic breakup attempt of this landmass which may have occurred from south to north along the Espinhaço mountain range.