Abstract
The Eastern Nigerian terrane forms the eastern flank of the Trans-Saharan Orogenic Belt within the Benin-Nigerian Shield. We report new petrological and P–T data of metamorphic rocks (migmatitic gneisses with subordinate granite gneiss, meta-quartz diorite, and meta-ultramafic rock) from Obudu in the southeastern flank of the Benin-Nigerian Shield for unraveling the tectono-metamorphic signatures of the eastern margin of the Trans-Saharan Orogenic Belt. The migmatized pelitic gneiss contains a peak mineral assemblage of plagioclase + rutile + garnet + biotite + K-feldspar + quartz ± liquid, based on which the peak metamorphic conditions are constrained as 850–890 °C and 9–10 kbar using phase equilibria modeling, optimal thermobarometry, and garnet-biotite geothermometry. Retrograde conditions were also estimated for a plagioclase + quartz + garnet + biotite + cordierite + rutile + sillimanite assemblage as 3.8 kbar/590 °C to 6.8 kbar/780 °C. The peak condition under granulite facies confirmed a marked increase of metamorphic grade from the greenschist facies in the western Benin-Nigerian Shield through the middle-upper amphibolite facies in the north-central Nigerian terranes to the granulite facies in the eastern part of the Benin-Nigerian Block. The results presented in this study are the first evidence of granulite-facies metamorphism from the easternmost parts of the Benin-Nigerian Shield. The clockwise path obtained in this study might suggest a continent-continent collisional setting for the evolution of this region related to the closure of the Goias-Pharusian Ocean and the formation of the Trans-Saharan Orogenic Belt.
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