Abstract

The Western Dharwar Craton (WDC) and the Karwar Block (KB) in southern Peninsular India provide important windows to Earth’s early crustal evolution and continental growth as these domains likely represent fragments of the first landmass or supercontinent on our planet. Here we employ, for the first time, a coupled laser ablation zircon U-Pb dating and in-situ Rb-Sr dating of micas (biotite, muscovite) and feldspars to evaluate the Meso- to Neoarchean crustal evolution and Proterozoic magmatism/metamorphism in the Karwar Block. This novel approach based on integrated geochronological results show that the WDC and KB experienced (i) a major Mesoarchean continental growth event (c. 3.2 to 2.9 Ga), (ii) younger Neoarchean and Paleoproterozoic magmatism/migmatization (syn- and post-tectonic granite formation events at c. 2.8–2.6 Ga and 2.2 Ga, respectively), and (iii) Mesoproterozoic metamorphism/thermal imprint (as young as 1.2 Ga). The zircon εHf(t) values exhibit a range from +0.4 to +9.8 in amphibolite, hornblende gneiss and trondhjemite (3.28–3.08 Ga), as well as the +6.1 to +9.7 range for 2.96 Ga old zircons in porphyritic granite, which suggests juvenile source for the magmatism that constructed this crustal block.Overall, this study illustrates the benefits of using coupled zircon U-Pb and in-situ Rb-Sr mica and feldspar dating approaches, as the former (U/Pb) provides robust constraints or a ‘baseline age’ for initial crystallization of crustal sequences whereas the latter (Rb/Sr) is sensitive to younger magmatic and metamorphic events. Thus, the integration of these two laser ablation ICP-MS based geochronometers applied to crustal evolution studies, has the potential to provide more comprehensive insights into continental growth in the early Earth, and later magmatic and metamorphic history of the region.

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