Abstract

The c. 2800 Ma old Atâ tonalite in the area north-east of Disko Bugt, West Greenland has largely escaped both Archaean and Proterozoic regional deformation and metamorphism. At its southern margin the tonalite is in contact with migmatitic quartz-feldspar-biotite gneiss and to the south both are progressively deformed in a high-grade gneiss terrain. The main deformation in the high grade gneisses involved hanging wall north-west displacements on a system of low-angle ductile shear zones that structurally underlie the Atâ tonalite. This shear zone system is folded by a large-scale, steeply inclined and north-west-trending antiform defined by the change in dip of planar fabrics. Minor folds related to the antiform are present and there is some evidence that folding was synkinematic with emplacement of a suite of c. 1750 Ma old ultramafic lamprophyre dykes. In much of the north-east Disko Bugt area it remains difficult to separate Archaean from Proterozoic structures and hence the extent of the Archaean terrane that has escaped intense Proterozoic reworking remains uncertain.

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