Abstract

The results of the detailed geological mapping, coupled with the isotope-geochemical study of a metamorphosed mafic-ultramafic complex known as the Central Belomorian Belt located in the Belomorian province of the Fennoscandian Shield, are reported.
 The protholith of the complex is ~ 2.9—3.1 Ga old. It has been subjected to two 2.87 and 1.87 Ga structural-metamorphic reworking. This complex is one of the oldest in the Belomorian Province.
 We present several lines of evidence showing that these lithologies constitute a tectonic remnant of the Mesoarchean oceanic lithosphere, rather than any other mafic-ulramafic complex from the other geodynamic settings. The Central-Belomorian high grade mafic-ultramafics reveal a clear geochemical coherency, which implies their genetic relationships. Their mafic protholiths stem from the partial melting of a mantle peridotite protholith. The petrologic modelling has shown that primary melts were formed in the garnet lherzolite field at a pressure of 3.5–3.8 GPa at ambient mantle potential temperatures of 1520–1550 °С which led to an emergence of ~ 25–30 thick oceanic crust. The available geochemical data suggest that the complex was formed at the initial stage of subduction. It marks the start of early continental crust-forming processes in the Belomorian Province.

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