Abstract

The Nellie Tonalite forms a discontinuous 20 km elongate northwest-trending felsic intrusion at the far-western end of the Western Zone of the Lamboo Province, in the Wunaamin Miliwundi Orogen, Western Australia. This intrusion is poorly understood with previous interpretations assigning it to the ca 1860 Ma Paperbark Supersuite. We present the first geochronological results for the Nellie Tonalite, which have a weighted mean laser ablation, inductively coupled plasma, mass spectrometry (LA-ICP-MS) U–Pb zircon age of 1794 ± 4 Ma. This date is coincident with the age for felsic granophyres of the Hart Dolerite, which have previously been described from the Kimberley Basin overlying the Halls Creek Orogen and central parts of the Wunaamin Miliwundi Orogen. Other similarities of the Nellie Tonalite with the felsic Hart Dolerite are micrographic and granophyric intergrowths of quartz and K-feldspar, and a distinct geochemical depletion of V. This V depletion is interpreted to be the result of closed-system, in situ fractional crystallisation of titanomagnetite from a basaltic composition. The fractional residue from this process can be found at several locations across the Halls Creek Orogen and Wunaamin Miliwundi Orogen and at Speewah Dome in the east Kimberley where magnetite gabbros within the Hart Dolerite also host a large Ti–V mineral resource. It is proposed that the Nellie Tonalite is a western correlate of the felsic Hart Dolerite. This demonstrates that the magmatic processes required for Speewah-style Ti–V mineralisation are extensive across the entire Lamboo Province. Additionally, the scale, constancy of the composition, texture and age of the felsic Hart Dolerite encompassing the entire inland margin of the Kimberley Region, and the rapid emplacement time of <3 m.y., support the interpretation of a mantle plume model for the emplacement of the Hart Dolerite.

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