Abstract

The Coorg Block in southern India is an archive of Paleo-Mesoarchean arc magmatism and continental building in the early Earth. Here we investigate a suite of mafic and ultramafic rocks and associated lithologies to characterize the roots of this microcontinent. We present petrologic, geochemical, as well as U-Pb and Lu-Hf data on zircon and U-Pb data on monazite from these rocks which provide insights into the petrogenesis of the rocks as well as the timings of magmatism and subsequent metamorphism. The geochemical features of the mafic granulites indicate that the rock suite was derived from the fractionation of a sub-alkaline tholeiite magma. Most of the rocks correspond to arc setting in a subduction-related tectonic regime. The rocks exhibit relative enrichment in LILE, Pb, and LREE with depletion in HFSE such as Nb and Ta suggesting partial melting of a metasomatized mantle wedge. Their high LILE/HFSE and LREE/HFSE ratios indicate slab dehydration and mantle wedge melting in typical island arc settings. The overall trace element and REE patterns of the rocks indicate that the source magma of the ultramafic and mafic rocks might have been derived from a refractory mantle source followed by the metasomatic enrichment of lithospheric mantle wedge by incompatible elements through the influx of subduction-derived fluids/melts. We present comprehensive zircon U-Pb data and Lu-Hf data on a suite of mafic granulite, garnet-bearing granulite, tremolite actinolite schist, charnockite, and anorthositic gabbro as well as monazite U-Pb data from a charnockite sample. Most zircon grains show cores with magmatic crystallization features and many grains are mantled by metamorphic rims. The age data show a prominent peak at 3.1 Ga for most of the rocks suggesting that the major crustal building in the Coorg Block occurred during the Mesoarchean. Rocks on the margins of the block were affected by the younger (Neoarchean) tectonothermal event in the surrounding blocks. The Lu-Hf isotopic data on zircon grains with ca. 3.1 Ga ages show εHf(t) values ranging from −4.4 to + 3.7 (average + 0.3). In the εHf(t) versus 207Pb/206Pb age diagram, the plots are distributed close to the CHUR line suggesting Paleo-Eoarchean juvenile magma sources. The voluminous mafic lower crust at the root of the Coorg Block is consistent with addition of mafic magmas through slab melting induced by high mantle potential temperatures in the Archean, as well as the interaction of fluids/melts with the mantle wedge.

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