Abstract
The Oskarshamn-Jönköping Belt in southeastern Sweden is a geographically well-defined area comprising calc-alkaline intrusions and volcanic rocks together with units of coarse-grained clastic metasedimentary rocks. Deviating from the general composition is the Fröderyd Group with basalts of MORB character. The belt is surrounded by the 1.81-1.77 Ga Transscandinavian Igneous Belt. A conglomerate clast from the central part of the Oskarshamn-Jönköping Belt yielded a U—Pb zircon age of 1829±8. This age confirms the c. 1.83-1.82 Ga formation age of the belt. Sm—Nd whole rock analyses of various rock types throughout the Oskarshamn-Jönköping Belt show that no substantially older (>100 m.y.) continental material contributed to these rocks. Furthermore, the high positive εNd values of many of the analysed rocks points to the depleted mantle as the main component of their source. The Sm—Nd analyses also suggest that while some of the felsic units were formed by a high degree of magmatic fractionation from a mantle derived melt others were formed as the result of remobilisation of older Svecofennian crust. The new U—Pb data together with previously published ages imply that the formation of the Oskarshamn-Jönköping Belt was a rather quick process, possibly completed in c. 10 m.y. The most likely model of genesis for the area, based on the new U—Pb and Sm—Nd data, is formation at a continental margin subduction zone to the present south-west of a slightly older Svecofennian continent. In such a model the Fröderyd Group represents either a fore-arc setting or a back-arc rift.
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