Search results for "Rodinia"

showing 10 items of 11 documents

Depositional ages and provenance of the Neoproterozoic Damara Supergroup (northwest Namibia): implications for the Angola-Congo and Kalahari cratons …

2017

Abstract The Damara Orogen is composed of the Damara, Kaoko and Gariep belts developed during the Neoproterozoic Pan-African Orogeny. The Damara Belt contains Neoproterozoic siliciclastic and carbonate successions of the Damara Supergroup that record rift to proto-ocean depositional phases during the Rodinia supercontinent break up. There are two conflicting interpretations of the geotectonic framework of the Damara Supergroup basin: i) as one major basin, composed of the Outjo and Khomas basins, related to rifting in the Angola-Congo-Kalahari paleocontinent or, ii) as two independent passive margin basins, one related to the Angola-Congo and the other to the Kalahari proto-cratons. Detrita…

Provenancegeographygeography.geographical_feature_category010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesGeology010502 geochemistry & geophysics01 natural sciencesUnconformitySupercontinentGEOCRONOLOGIACratonPaleontologyBasement (geology)RodiniaGeology0105 earth and related environmental sciencesTerraneZircon
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Ca. 750–1100 Ma magmatic events and Grenville-age deformation in Sri Lanka: relevance for Rodinia supercontinent formation and dispersal, and Gondwan…

2003

Abstract Large volumes of ∼880–1100 Ma calc-alkaline granitoid rocks in the Wanni and Vijayan crustal provinces of Sri Lanka make it likely that these domains were produced in active margin settings, probably Grenville-age magmatic arcs. We report new single zircon evaporation ages and Nd isotopic systematics for dioritic to granodioritic gneisses of the Kadugannawa Complex of central Sri Lanka which record a period of magmatic arc activity between 1006 and 881 Ma and show this complex to be part of the Wanni domain. Both provinces were probably generated in arc-related settings at the outer margin of Rodinia, but this cannot be ultimately proven on the basis of the currently available data…

GondwanaPaleontologyPassive marginBack-arc basinGeochemistryRodiniaGeologyAccretion (geology)SupercontinentGeologyEarth-Surface ProcessesZirconGneissJournal of Asian Earth Sciences
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Has the East African Orogen Played Any Role in the Formation and Breakup of the Supercontinent Rodinia and the Amalgamation of Gondwana? New Evidence…

2001

PaleontologyGondwanaField (physics)RodiniaGeologyBreakupSupercontinentGeologyGondwana Research
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The Fate of Rodinia in the Light of the Discovery of ca. 1000 Ma Old Ophiolites in the Central Asian Orogenic Belt of Siberia

2001

PaleontologyEarth scienceRodiniaGeologyOphioliteGeologyGondwana Research
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African, southern Indian and South American cratons were not part of the Rodinia supercontinent: evidence from field relationships and geochronology

2003

We discuss the question whether the late Mesoproterozoic and early Neoproterozoic rocks of eastern, central and southern Africa, Madagascar, southern India, Sri Lanka and South America have played any role in the formation and dispersal of the supercontinent Rodinia, believed to have existed between about 1000 and 750 Ma ago. First, there is little evidence for the production of significant volumes of ~1.4–1.0 Ga (Kibaran or Grenvillian age) continental crust in the Mozambique belt (MB) of East Africa, except, perhaps, in parts of northern Mozambique. This is also valid for most terranes related to West Gondwana, which are made up of basement rocks older than Mesoproterozoic, reworked in th…

PaleontologyGondwanaGeophysicsContinental collisionContinental crustRodiniaLaurentiaMetamorphismMozambique BeltSupercontinentSeismologyGeologyEarth-Surface ProcessesTectonophysics
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Early Neoproterozoic crustal growth and microcontinent formation of the north–central Central Asian Orogenic Belt: New geological, geochronological, …

2021

Abstract In this study, new geological, geochronological, geochemical, and Nd–Hf isotopic data are presented for the Melange Zone within the Zavkhan terrane, Mongolia, and the terrane structure, early Neoproterozoic continental crust growth, and microcontinent formation in the north–central part of the Central Asian Orogenic Belt (CAOB) are discussed. The Melange Zone separates high-grade complexes of the northwestern part of the Zavkhan terrane and unmetamorphosed Neoproterozoic Zavkhan Formation covered by Cryogenian–Cambrian shelf deposits of the southwestern part. Zone consist of a lower-grade association of basalts, basaltic andesites, rarely felsic volcanic rocks, trondhjemites of the…

010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesContinental crustGeochemistryMetamorphismGeology010502 geochemistry & geophysics01 natural sciencesSupercontinentContinental arcContinental marginRodiniaIsland arcGeology0105 earth and related environmental sciencesTerraneGondwana Research
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Reworking of the Tarim Craton by underplating of mantle plume-derived magmas: Evidence from Neoproterozoic granitoids in the Kuluketage area, NW China

2011

Abstract Most Neoproterozoic granitoids in the Kuluketage area, northern Tarim Craton are characterized by strongly depleted HREE abundances and high Sr/Y and (La/Yb) N ratios, showing typical geochemical features of adakitic rocks. Zircon U–Pb dating of three adakitic plutons yielded Neoproterozoic ages (754 ± 4, 790 ± 3 and 798 ± 3 Ma). The adakitic granitoids exhibit low MgO and TiO 2 contents. Their low Cr, Co and Ni abundances, low ɛ Hf ( t ) values (−21 to −11) and high FeO T /MgO ratios (mostly 2.2–2.9) preclude the possibility of being derived from partial melts of delaminated lower crust. The relatively low ɛ Hf ( t ) values and old Hf two-stage model ages ( T DM 2 = 2 . 42 – 3 .0 …

Underplatinggeographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryPlutonGeochemistryPartial meltingGeologyVolcanic rockCratonGeochemistry and PetrologyRodiniaPetrologyGeologyZirconPetrogenesisPrecambrian Research
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The East African Orogen: New Zircon and Nd Ages and Implications for Rodinia and Gondwana Supercontinent Formation and Dispersal

2001

SWEATPaleontologyGondwanaRodiniaBiological dispersalGeologySupercontinentGeologyZirconGondwana Research
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The most ancient ophiolite of the Central Asian fold belt: U–Pb and Pb–Pb zircon ages for the Dunzhugur Complex, Eastern Sayan, Siberia, and geodynam…

2002

Abstract Ophiolitic rocks with a zircon age of ∼1020 Ma occur in the Dunzhugur complex of East Sayan, Siberia, and are part of a Neoproterozoic to early Palaeozoic segment of the Central Asian fold belt. The most spectacular suite is exposed along the Oka and Bokson rivers, where a complete ophiolite sequence with mantle tectonites, a layered sequence composed of dunite, wehrlite, and pyroxenite, a gabbro section, a sheeted diabase dyke complex and basaltic pillow lavas are exposed. Petrologic and geochemical data suggest that all members of the ophiolite originally belonged to the same cogenetic mafic–ultramafic crustal section and support a supra-subduction zone setting in a fore-arc rift…

geographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryPillow lavaGabbroGeochemistryOphioliteSupercontinentCratonGeophysicsSpace and Planetary ScienceGeochemistry and PetrologyEarth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous)RodiniaBalticaGeologyZirconEarth and Planetary Science Letters
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Du Toit Memorial Lecture 1999: The Mozambique belt of East Africa and Madagascar: significance of zircon and Nd model ages for Rodinia and Gondwana s…

2001

This paper discusses the question as to whether or not the high-grade metamorphic rocks exposed in the Mozambique belt (MB) of East Africa and Madagascar have played any role in the formation and dispersal of the supercontinent Rodinia, believed to have existed between ~1000 and ~750 Ma. First, there is little evidence for the production of significant volumes of ~1300 to ~1000 Ma (Kibaran- or Grenvillian-age) continental crust in the MB, except, perhaps, in parts of northern Mozambique. This crust cannot be related conclusively to either magmatic accretion processes along the active margin(s) of Rodinia, or to a collision event during continental collision and accretion leading to amalgama…

GondwanaPaleontologyContinental collisionContinental crustRodiniaMetamorphismGeologyMozambique BeltSupercontinentGeologyTerraneSouth African Journal of Geology
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