Abstract

The Larsemann Hills area is part of a reworked early Neoproterozoic metamorphic terrain in southwestern Prydz Bay, East Antarctica. Ultramafic and mafic granulites, whose origins remain controversial, occur as lenses, boudins or layered bodies within the para- and ortho-gneiss in the region. The ultramafic and mafic granulites show spinel-olivine-bearing and two-pyroxene-bearing mineral assemblages recrystallized at 860–900°C. Their bulk rock analyses indicate an origin as igneous cumulates, with high Mg# (molar MgO/(MgO+FeO)) from 0.73 to 0.84 for ultramafic granulite and from 0.46 to 0.78 for mostly mafic granulite as well as high Cr and Ni contents ([Cr] and [Ni] up to 1826ppm and 1400ppm respectively for ultramafic granulite and [Cr] of 1460ppm for mafic granulite). Trace element patterns show pronounced negative Nb anomalies, suggesting a subduction-related tectonic setting for their precursors, consistent with derivation from arc basalts, also suggested by low TiO2 and K-enrichment in mafic granulites. The ultramafic to mafic granulites may have been formed in a subduction-related continental back-arc basin environment simultaneously with peak metamorphism associated with arc-continent collision during the early Neoproterozoic (990–900Ma) Rayner orogeny.

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