Abstract

Northeastern Mozambique exposes a deeply eroded high-grade segment of the East African Orogen, situated at the critical intersection of the Pan-African orogenic belts, showing widespread granulite facies lithologies. This study documents and characterizes metamorphism attributed to the multistage Neoproterozoic and Early Palaeozoic events, relating to a polyphase Pan-African history of outboard nappe stacking, nappe emplacement onto Mesoproterozoic crust, and compressional and extensional deformation along the Lurio belt: 1) A Neoproterozoic nappe stack (Cabo Delgado Nappe Complex) records high-pressure granulite facies: The highest peak conditions reach P = 1.45 GPa and T > 800 °C are in Grt-Cpx-Pl-bearing mafic granulites of the Xixano Complex. A post-peak isothermal decompressional P-T evolution is supported by garnet chemical zoning pattern, pseudsection modelling and garnet corona textures. 2) The underlying Mesoproterozoic gneiss complexes record amphibolite facies to intermediate-pressure granulite facies, the high-grade metamorphism is documented by Grt-Opx-Cpx-Pl-bearing mafic granulites and charnockitic gneisses in the southern part of the Unango and Marrupa complexes. This metamorphism is attributed to crustal thickening related to overriding of the nappe complex and shortening along the Lurio belt during the early Palaeozoic Kuunga orogeny. 3) The Ocua Complex coring the Lurio belt is a locus of Early Palaeozoic high-pressure metamorphism. A minimum of P = 0.79 ± 0.13 GPa at T = 760 ± 98 °C is constrained by Grt-Opx-Cpx-Pl-Qz assemblage in mafic granulite from the western limb while high-pressure granulite metamorphism was reached in the eastern part of the complex. The high-pressure granulite facies conditions is followed by isothermal decompression.

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