Abstract
New geochemical, U–Pb zircon and Nd–Hf isotope data for felsic and mafic components of the Kalkadoon–Leichardt Belt (KLB) in the Mount Isa Inlier of northwest Queensland confirm that the evolution and tectonic make-up of this belt prior to 1.8 Ga was closely aligned with that of the Western Fold Belt. Like pre-1.8 Ga magmatic rocks of the Western Fold Belt, those in the KLB are characterised by late Archean to Paleoproterozoic crustal residence ages (TDM ca 2.6–2.3 Ga) but the geochemical data suggest stronger within-plate affinities, implying that the KLB intrusions underwent a greater degree of crustal assimilation and/or were emplaced further inboard of the active subduction margin. A new SHRIMP U–Pb zircon age of ca 1.86 Ga from a felsic intrusion in the northern KLB confirms earlier age constraints for the main phase of the Kalkadoon Granite. Nd isotope patterns for intrusions in the Western Fold Belt and the KLB are distinct from those of ca 1.7–1.5 Ga intrusions in the Eastern Fold Belt. This isotopic discrepancy suggests the Eastern Fold Belt underwent a separate evolutionary history and was accreted to the WFB/KLB at some stage prior to, or during, the ca 1.86 Ga Barramundi Orogeny. The occurrence of widespread, isotopically homogeneous ca 1.72 Ga magmatism (Argylla Event) across the entire Mount Isa Inlier implies that amalgamation of the allochthonous Eastern Fold Belt with the North Australian Craton was completed by that time. The significantly elevated metallogenic potential of the Eastern Fold Belt for ca 1540–1500 Ma Fe-oxide–copper–gold, relatively low endowment of the Kalkadoon–Leichhardt Belt, and predominance of ca 1650–1550 Ma base metal occurrences in the Western Fold Belt, are all consequences of the tectonic interplay and lithospheric processes that controlled the evolution of the Mt Isa Inlier prior to ca 1.8 Ga.
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