Abstract
AbstractThe Capricorn Orogen, Western Australia, is a complex orogenic zone that records the convergence and collision of the Archaean Yilgarn and Pilbara cratons in forming the West Australian Craton (WAC), then over one billion years of subsequent intracontinental reworking. Granites associated with these tectonothermal events (the Dalgaringa, Bertibubba, Moorarie, Durlacher and Thirty Three supersuites) are exposed in the western part of the Capricorn Orogen. This study integrates radiogenic (U–Pb and Hf) and stable isotope (O) analysis of zircon grains from granitic rocks in the Capricorn Orogen to determine their ages and magmatic sources, including the relative contributions of mantle versus crustal material. Granites from the margin of the Yilgarn Craton record periods of crustal growth and reworking during the Archaean that influenced later Proterozoic magmatic events. Components of the Capricorn Orogen, collectively termed the Glenburgh Terrane, have previously been considered to be exotic to the adjacent Pilbara and Yilgarn cratons. However, new U–Pb zircon geochronology and Lu–Hf isotope compositions of basement rocks in the Glenburgh Terrane (the Halfway Gneiss) have similarities to some terranes of the Yilgarn Craton, and are interpreted to represent a reworked portion of the craton that was re-accreted during the Glenburgh Orogeny. Arc magmatism during the Ma Glenburgh Orogeny resulted in a period of crustal growth, with magmas representing a mixture of 50–90 % mantle-derived magmas and 50–10 % magmas derived from an evolved crustal component with an isotopic composition equivalent to that of the Halfway Gneiss. Following assembly of the WAC, granite magmatism in the Capricorn Orogen records a significant change from one dominated by mantle-derived magmatism to one dominated by crustal melting and an increased contribution from metasedimentary material. This transition reflects a geodynamic evolution from subduction–accretion to collision and intracratonic reworking. The isotopic characteristics of granites from the Moorarie Supersuite indicate three distinct sources: (1) a metasedimentary component; (2) an evolved crustal component, comparable with the Glenburgh Terrane; (3) a mafic juvenile component. Following this, the Hf–O compositions of the Durlacher Supersuite indicate that they were derived from reworking of the Moorarie Supersuite granites, and require no juvenile contribution or any additional sedimentary source. The isotopic compositions of the Thirty Three Supersuite pegmatites indicate that they were largely derived from reworking of the Moorarie and Durlacher supersuites.
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