Abstract
Evidence is presented which shows the rocks of Ilordleq to be the products of two distinct episodes of plutonic (Read, 1957, p.165) activity. In the first of these episodes the mise-en-place of a large area of synkinematic granitic rocks was affected. A NE striking belt of pre-granite supracrustal rocks is preserved in the north of the area, and isolated remnants of the supracrustal rocks remain as enclaves in the granite. Cutting the metasediments and metavolcanics of the supracrustal group are numerous basic dykes which pre-date the granite. The first plutonic episode was followed by a further period of emplacement of basic dykes, which cut both supracrustal and granitic rocks. Indications of original chilled margins in these dykes, together with their regular form, suggest a marked change in conditions from those prevailing in the preceding plutonic episode. The second period of plutonic activity which followed resulted in a reactivation of much of the granite previously formed, especially in the northern part of the area where basic dykes were deformed and became either disrupted or were migmatised by kinematically controlled metasomatism. The surrounding granite shows evidence of flow in the solid state and was evidently approaching a state in which diapiric movement was possible. In a less reactivated part of the area, porphyroblastic microcline augen granites were formed in those places where the supracrustal enclaves were most strongly deformed. Deformation during each plutonic episode took place by homogeneous strain with resulting change in shape rather than tectonic transport; minor structures in supracrustal, granitic and dyke rocks are homologous. Principal stress axes were similarly oriented during both plutonic episodes. A further period of emplacement of basic dykes took place in the closing stages of the second period of plutonic activity, while the country rocks were still at elevated temperatures and during the operation, at least intermittently, of compressive forces. A conjugate set of shear fractures controlled the emplacement of these dykes; movement along the fractures and emplacement of dykes were essentially contemporaneous and gave rise to 'differentiation by deformation' of the partially consolidated dyke magma, sigmoid foliation of the dykes, and other distinctive features. Further swarms of basic dykes were subsequently emplaced during the Gardar volcanic episode (ca. 1150 x 106 years). Reference is made to published criteria for the recognition of relict dykes, replacement dykes, and dykes emplaced in hot granite, and the possibility of confusion with dykes in reactivated granites is indicated. The suitability of the orogenic cycle as the primary unit of Precambrian chronology is questioned and a less interpretative unit advocated. The Ilordleq chronology is compared with those established by the writer's colleagues elsewhere in South Greenland and possible alternatives suggested to some current correlations. The similarity of many features of the Ilordleq rocks to those of the Lewisian rocks of Scotland is referred to, and the concept of a migrating front of plutonic activity shown to be not applicable to Ilordleq.
Highlights
With the possibIe exception of the youngest dyke swarm, the rocks of South Greenland are of Precambrian age and consist mainly of a varied assemblage of gneisses, granites, and metamorphosed supracrustal rocks: smaller areas of unmetamorphosed intrusive and extrusive volcanics and continental sediments occur.Three petrologically distinct areas can be recognised in South Greenland
A brief reference was made in the introduction to the three petrologicaIly distinct regions of South Greenland, viz. the Ivigtut region, extending north from Kobberminebugt, characterised by gneisses and metamorphosed supracrustal rocks; the Julianehåb region extending from Kobberminebugt in the west to the margin of the inland ice 150 km to the east, consisting mainly of granitic rocks; the Nanortalik region beginning some 30-40 km south of Julianehåb and consisting mainly of gneisses and supracrustal rocks
The use of metabasaltic dykes in the chronological subdivision of areas of plutonic rocks was initiated by SEDERHOLM in his investigations of the migmatitic rocks of S and SW Finland
Summary
With the possibIe exception of the youngest dyke swarm, the rocks of South Greenland are of Precambrian age and consist mainly of a varied assemblage of gneisses, granites, and metamorphosed supracrustal rocks: smaller areas of unmetamorphosed intrusive and extrusive volcanics and continental sediments occur. The greater part of Ilordleq is occupied by granitic rocks of the Julianehåb Granite formation but the oldest rocks encountered are represented by the NE striking band of a metamorphosed supracrustal series occurring in the north of the area: this has a migmatitic contact with the granitic rocks on either side and the boundaries as shown on the map are arbitrary. This juxtaposition of elements characteristic of both the Ivigtut and Julianehåb Granite areas affords a means of determining the chronological relationship of these two areas.
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