Abstract

We report SHRIMP zircon ages for felsic volcanic rocks of the early Archaean Nondweni greenstone belt (NGB) located in northern KwaZulu-Natal Province, South Africa. The NGB is part of a chain of greenstone belt remnants that occurs south of the well-known Barberton greenstone belt (BGB). Two samples of felsic volcanic rocks of the basal Toggekry Formation yielded zircon ages of ~3.53Ga, whereas significantly younger ages of ~3.41Ga were obtained for two samples of felsic rocks from near the top of the Witkop Formation. The latter date now constrains the age of stromatolite-like structures in cherts associated with the felsic rocks, which probably represent some of the oldest preserved evidence of life on Earth. The zircon ages also indicate that the NGB correlates well chronologically with the BGB and is one of the oldest volcano-sedimentary successions in the southeastern Kaapvaal Craton. Geochemical data for the felsic NGB rocks suggest formation by partial melting or crystal fractionation of a mafic source that was contaminated by older crust, possibly in a back-arc environment. Initial εNd values for NGB rocks range from −1.2 to +0.3 and suggest involvement of pre-greenstone continental crust that was possibly extensive in the southeastern part of the Kaapvaal Craton during Palaeoarchaean times.

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