Abstract

The Saglek Block forms the northern part of the Nain Province and underwent widespread metamorphism at c. 2.7 Ga, producing the dominant gneissosity and intercalation of supracrustal sequences. Zircon dating of gneiss samples collected along 80 km of the Labrador coast from Ramah Bay in the north to Hebron Fjord in the south confirms the widespread extent of high-grade metamorphism between 2750 and 2700 Ma. In addition, a distinct event between 2550 and 2510 Ma produced felsic melt with peritectic garnet in metavolcanic gneiss and granoblastic recrystallization in mafic granulite. Ductile deformation of granite emplaced at c. 2550 Ma indicates that this later event involved a degree of tectonism during high- T metamorphism. Such tectonism may be related to a hypothesized post-2.7 Ga juxtaposition of the predominantly Eoarchean Saglek Block against the Mesoarchean Hopedale Block, along a north–south boundary that extends from the coast near Nain to offshore of Saglek Bay. Evidence of reworking of c. 2.7 Ga gneisses by c. 2.5 Ga tectonothermal activity has been found elsewhere on the margins of the North Atlantic Craton, of which the Nain Province represents the western margin. In particular, a recent suggestion that c. 2.5 Ga metamorphic ages along the northern margin of the North Atlantic Craton in SW Greenland may record the final assembly of the craton could also apply to the western margin as represented by the rocks of the Nain Province. Supplementary material: Plots and geochemical data are available at https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.c.4567934

Highlights

  • This study investigates the sequence of deformation events in the Saglek Block, based on coastal field work between Ramah Bay and Hebron Fjord (Fig. 1), conducted by our team in 2014 and 2017, and the scheme by van Kranendonk & Helmstaedt (1990) for the North River–Nutak area, 100 km south of Saglek Bay

  • Plugs drilled from polished thin sections, and monazite and zircon mineral grains separated from crushed samples, were mounted in epoxy, polished and imaged by scanning electron microscope (SEM) with backscattered electron (BSE) and cathodoluminescence (CL) detectors at the John de Laeter Centre, Curtin University, Western Australia

  • In situ U–Pb ion microprobe dating of monazite and sub-grain dating of zircon and monazite provide clear evidence of high-T metamorphism at both c. 2.7 and c. 2.5 Ga in the Saglek Block

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Summary

Objectives

The purpose of this paper is to re-evaluate the timing and significance of deformation and metamorphism in the Saglek Block, utilizing new U–Pb isotopic dating of zircon and monazite

Methods
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