Abstract

The Baoulé-Mossi Paleoproterozoic domain on the West African Craton is known for its world-class orogenic gold deposits formed during the Eburnean orogeny between ca. 2.15 and 2.07Ga. New results of U-Pb zircon dating in combination with Hf-isotope geochemical data indicate that a suite of mafic and felsic potassic plutonites were emplaced in Guinea (in vicinity to the Archean Kéména-Man domain, KMD) between ca. 2.10 and 2.08Ga. All plutonites are characterized by (i) enrichment in LILE and LREE, (ii) strong positive Pb spikes and (iii) depletion in Ta-Nb-Ti, but based on zircon U-Pb-Hf isotope data two groups can be distinguished, each comprising Qtz-monzodiorites and Bt-granites. Bt-granites of group 1, sampled away from the craton are xenocryst-free despite similar or higher Zr-saturation temperatures (∼820°C) compared to group 2 rocks (∼780°C), and reveal mostly superchondritic ɛHf(2.1 Ga) up to +3.7, (TDM=2.8–2.4Ga). Rocks of group 2, sampled in close vicinity to the KMD, show highly negative ɛHf(2.1 Ga) of −16 to −10 (TDM=3.5–3.2Ga) and contains abundant zircon xenocrysts with ages between 3.71 and 2.78Ga (TDM=4.2–3.4), overlapping with zircon U-Pb-Hf data obtained from three granodiorites of the KMD, dated at ca. 3.09, 3.08 and 2.87Ga. This difference indicates that the potassic plutonites resulted from partial melting of different sources within the crust and mantle during the same magmatic event at ca. 2.10–2.08Ga. The Qtz-monzodiorites derived from metasomatized mantle sources enriched by subducted sediments that in case of group 1 were derived from relatively juvenile Paleoproterozoic island arcs, and in case of group 2 from the Archean KMD. Bt-granites of group 1 might result either from reworking of relatively juvenile Paleoproterozoic crust, or from hybridization between (fractionated) monzodiorites and hot crustal melts, whereas Bt-granites of group 2 can be explained by in situ reworking of Archean TTG crust. Contemporaneous partial melting of the different mantle and crustal domains perhaps happened in response to lithospheric delamination following the collision of the juvenile Paleoproterozoic domain with the KMD. We further propose that this process also caused remelting of residual Au-rich cumulates left in the deep lithosphere by previous arc magmatism or Au-enriched metasomatic veins in lithospheric mantle.

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