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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

The Limpopo Complex of Southern Africa: outstanding issues with emphasis on ultrahigh-temperature-high-pressure metamorphism and granitoid magmatism

07 June 2012 (has links)
Ph.D. / Preserved Archean crust dominantly recording lower temperature conditions (greenschist to amphibolites facies), the earliest widespread record of ultrahigh- temperature metamorphism occur in the Neoarchean. Considering that, collisional tectonic setting has been postulated as a possible tectonic scenario for the generation of ultrahigh-temperature metamorphism, sites where Archean cratons underwent collision can be potential sites for preservation of ultrahigh-temperature metamorphic granulites. The Limpopo Complex is a high-grade metamorphic terrain considered to have formed by collision in Neoarchean time between the Archean Kaapvaal and Zimbabwe cratons.Detailed petrographic and mineral chemical characterization of representative high Mg-Al granulites from the Southern Marginal Zone, Central Zone and the Northern Marginal Zone – forming the three subzones of the Limpopo Complex – was carried out. Evidence for the preservation of mineral assemblages considered diagnostic of ultrahigh- temperature metamorphic conditions, such as orthopyroxene+sillimanite±quartz, high-Al/(MgTs) orthopyroxene, sapphirine+quartz, spinel+quartz, corundum+quartz and antiperthite, are shown from these high Mg-Al granulites. Most of these mineral assemblages are reported for the first time from the Limpopo Complex. In addition, two unique textures are also reported – one, the discovery of corundum lamellar intergrowth with orthopyroxene from a high Mg-Al granulite from the Southern Marginal Zone, and second, the rare occurrence of sapphirine+quartz post dating orthopyroxene+sillimanite±quartz from two Mg-Al granulites from the Central Zone. Pressure-temperature calculations including representative P-T phase diagrams computed for the bulk compositions of the granulites studied clearly indicate ultrahigh- temperature conditions for all the three subzones. In contrast to two previous studies, one each for the Southern Marginal Zone (~950°C) and the Central Zone (~930°C), this study presents higher temperature estimates of ~1050 to ~1100°C for the three subzones. Together with examples of ultrahigh-temperature metamorphic conditions reported by the two previous studies, this study shows that the ultrahigh-temperature event reported here has affected the length and breadth of the three subzones of the Limpopo Complex. Further, the high-pressure conditions inferred from the early composition of orthopyroxene from the unique orthopyroxene-corundum intergrowth and the P-T phase diagrams computed for representative granulites from the three zones suggest a common high pressure event in all the three sub zones of the Limpopo Complex.

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