Abstract

Nd model ages show that the suture between the Archean Bastar craton and Proterozoic Eastern Ghats Province (a part of the Eastern Ghats Belt), India is marked by a broad shear zone that contains a mixture of rocks from both the blocks. In this suture zone, amphibolite facies rocks of the Bastar craton were subjected to high pressure granulite facies metamorphism possibly at ~500 Ma (published isotopic data). New petrological, geothermobarometric and P-T pseudosection studies show that dehydration-melting of amphibole (in mafic protolith) and of biotite (in quartzofeldspathic protolith) along a clockwise P-T path led to peak metamorphic conditions of 9.75 ± 0.5 kbar; 875 ± 30 °C. Mafic granulites from the Eastern Ghats Province had an earlier metamorphic history of isobaric cooling from unknown peak metamorphic conditions, but currently record P-T maximum values of 9.25 ± 0.25 kbar; 825 ± 25 °C. Followed by cooling through ~100 °C from the peak metamorphic conditions, mafic granulites from the Bastar craton were exhumed to mid-crustal levels by decompression-cooling, probably as a tectonic wedge. This decompression-cooling is also shared by charnockitic rocks of the Bastar craton and mafic granulites of the Eastern Ghats Province. We interpret further burial of the Bastar craton rocks as a result of underthrusting beneath the Eastern Ghats Province, consistent with available seismic data. Total absence of any evidence of ocean opening or closure between the Bastar craton and the Eastern Ghats Province at around 500 Ma, coupled with interpretation of deduced P-T paths, suggest the shear zone resulted from far-field stress related to the Kuunga orogeny in an intraplate setting. This would support a model of Tonian age amalgamation of the Bastar craton and the Eastern Ghats Province as a part of the Greater Indian Landmass.

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