Contrasting Styles of Lower Crustal Metamorphism from a Granulite Suite of Rocks from Angul, Eastern Ghats Belt, India: Implications for the India–Antarctica Correlation

Author:

Banerjee Aparupa1ORCID,Ganguly Proloy2,Das Kaushik34ORCID,Sorcar Nilanjana5ORCID,Bose Sankar46

Affiliation:

1. Shahid Matangini Hazra Government General Degree College for Women Department of Geology, , Purba Medinipur, West Bengal 721649, India

2. Durgapur Government College Department of Geology, , Paschim Bardhaman, West Bengal 713214, India

3. Hiroshima University Department of Earth and Planetary Systems Science, , 1-3-1, Kagamiyama, Higashi- Hiroshima, Hiroshima 739-8526, Japan

4. Hiroshima Institute of Plate Convergence Region Research , 1-3-1, Kagamiyama, Higashi-Hiroshima, Hiroshima 739-8526, Japan

5. National Centre for Earth Science Studies Solid Earth Research Group, , Trivandrum, India

6. Presidency University Department of Geology, , Kolkata 700073, India

Abstract

AbstractThe present work is focussed on a suite of high-grade rocks including mafic granulite, aluminous granulite, khondalite, charnockite, and augen gneiss along with medium-grade rocks like olivine-bearing metanorite, gabbro, and porphyritic granite of the Angul domain at the northern margin of the Proterozoic Eastern Ghats Province (EGP). Based on the petrological and geothermobarometric data, two distinct metamorphic events have been identified. The imprints of the earlier event (MA1) are preserved in the mafic granulite, aluminous granulite, khondalite, augen gneiss, and fine-grained charnockite, but those are best preserved in mafic granulite and aluminous granulite. In mafic granulite, orthopyroxene + clinopyroxene + plagioclase ± garnet+ ilmenite ± quartz assemblage was stabilised at the peak MA1 conditions, whereas the peak MA1 assemblage is represented by Fe3+-garnet + hematite + magnetite + cordierite + K-feldspar + plagioclase + sillimanite + quartz + melt in aluminous granulite. Phase equilibria modelling and thermobarometric data suggest the P–T conditions of >850°C, 7 to 8 kbar for this event. The retrograde metamorphism (MA1R) involved minor decompression (down to ~5 kbar) and subsequent cooling to form biotite- and hornblende-bearing mineral assemblages in aluminous granulite and mafic granulite, respectively. Texturally constrained monazite (U–Th–total Pb) and zircon (U–Pb) data from the former rock suggest ca. 1200 Ma age of the MA1 metamorphism, which was associated with granitic and charnockitic magmatism as constrained from oscillatory-zoned zircon domains in the augen gneiss and fine-grained charnockite. The rock ensemble was affected by a younger metamorphic event (MA2), which is texturally characterised by partial replacement of hornblende (developed during MA1R) to orthopyroxene ± clinopyroxene + plagioclase ± ilmenite + melt assemblage in mafic granulite. Moreover, biotite of aluminous granulite has undergone dehydration melting to produce garnet + cordierite-bearing assemblage. Garnet in the above assemblage did not form as porphyroblastic phase and overgrew the MA1 garnet. The MA2 event followed a counterclockwise P–T trajectory, causing heating (up to 800°C) with associated loading (from 4.0 to 5.8 kbar) along the prograde path. Monazite U–Th–total Pb data from aluminous granulite and khondalite suggest MA2 ages of 987 ± 12 and 975 ± 16 Ma, respectively. Fine-grained charnockite and augen gneiss also recorded the imprints of MA2 event by developing thin to thick sector-zoned overgrowth yielding group ages of 979 ± 12 and 982 ± 29 Ma, respectively. Zircon overgrowth in mafic granulite formed at 962 ± 13 Ma. The MA2 event coincides with the crystallisation of coarse-grained charnockite at 983 ± 22 Ma and porphyritic granite at 960 ± 10 Ma. Geochronological data, thus, indicate that the Angul domain underwent the MA2 metamorphism and associated magmatism at ca. 990 to 960 Ma. The apparent absence of MA1 event (~1200 Ma) in the greater part of the EGP and its dominance in the Angul domain suggest that the latter was possibly an exotic block at ca. 1200 Ma and joined with the rest of the EGP only after ca. 960 Ma. We further suggest that the metamorphic history of the Angul domain is strikingly different from the rest of the EGP, but matches well with that of the Prydz Bay region of the East Antarctica.

Funder

University Grants Commission

Department of Science and Technology

JSPS KAKENHI

Ministry of Earth Sciences

P.G. acknowledges Science and Engineering Research Board

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Geochemistry and Petrology,Geophysics

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