Abstract
New LA-SF-ICP-MS U-Pb zircon dating of high-K granitoids from the Campo Belo metamorphic complex, southern São Francisco Craton (Brazil), reveals a long period (ca. 100My) of Neoarchean granitic magmatism that post-date the TTG magmatism. The oldest studied pluton is a highly porphyritic biotite orthogneiss emplaced at 2748±5Ma, followed by a hornblende-biotite orthogneiss (2727±7Ma). Both granitic bodies were affected by a deformation event prior to the emplacement of the Rio do Amparo, Bom Sucesso and Lavras granitoid plutons at 2716±6Ma, 2696±6Ma and 2646±5Ma, respectively. The Neoarchean granitic magmatism ended with the intrusion of peraluminous leucogranitic dikes at 2631±4Ma.The 2.73–2.65Ga Campo Belo granitoids share chemical features of A-type granites, such as high apatite- and zircon-saturation temperatures (mostly>800°C), relatively high Fe-number, high total alkalis and characteristic enrichment in LREE and HFSE although most samples of the Rio do Amparo granite have lower HFSE and LREE content that typical A-type granites but very high Th. The high Th content of the Rio do Amparo and Bom Sucesso granites may suggest involvement of Th-orthosilicate in their sources. The trace element composition permits to classify the Campo Belo granitoids as A2-type granites, suggesting derivation from partial melting of TTG-crustal sources likely in an extensional setting.Significant reworking of Mesoarchean crust is suggested by mostly negative εNdi values (Rio do Amparo: −2.0 and +3.1; Bom Sucesso: −3.6, −3.1 and +0.9; Lavras: −2.5 and −0.2) and old Nd model ages (TDM close to 3.1Ga), although with probable involvement of juvenile material (TDM of 2.7–2.9Ga). This contrasts with Neoarchean granites of the northern São Francisco and Congo cratons characterized by negligible juvenile imprint.The 2.75–2.63Ga Campo Belo granitoids witness the thermal stabilization of the Archean lithosphere through a major episode of high-K granitoid magmatism between 2760 and 2600Ma, which affected the whole São Francisco Craton and the northern Congo Craton.
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