Abstract

A series of post‐depositional alteration events can be distinguished in the late Archean Witwatersrand Basin. They range from thrust‐controlled metamorphism during pre‐Transvaal crustal thickening, burial metamorphism and hydrothermal infiltration during crustal thinning and associated deposition of the 2.6‐2.1 Ga Transvaal Supergroup sediments, thermal metamorphism related to the 2.06 Ga Bushveld Igneous Complex, and hydrothermal alteration as a consequence of the 2.023 Ga Vredefort impact event. The relative importance of these events varies locally, with different events responsible for the maximum temperatures achieved in different parts of the basin: the pre‐Transvaal metamorphism affected the northern margin of the basin, whereas the syn‐Bushveld thermal metamorphism is particularly pronounced in the lower parts of the Witwatersrand Supergroup. Chlorite geothermometry, in conjunction with fluid inclusion microthermometry and the thermodynamic modeling of equilibrium mineral assemblages, was applied ...

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