Abstract

Two new U-Pb concordia zircon ages are reported for granulite-facies rocks from the Mozambique Orogenic Belt in eastern Tanzania. These rocks are thought to have been generated during collision-related crustal thickening process and exhumed by deep erosion. A two-pyroxene granulite sample from the Pare Mountains has yielded a concordia upper intercept age of 645 ± 10 Ma, whereas a granulite-facies meta-anorthosite sample from the Uluguru Mountains has given an upper intercept age of 695 ± 4 Ma. Evidence for the involvement of older crustal material (pre-Late Proterozoic) was not found. These zircon data indicate crystallization during the peak of granulite-facies metamorphism during the Pan-African orogeny ( c . 950 to c . 550 Ma) consistent with a subduction-collisional environment.

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