Friday, October 03, 2014

Gulden Draak Knoll Microcontinent Found Off Western Australia


Discovery of a microcontinent (Gulden Draak Knoll) offshore Western Australia: Implications for East Gondwana reconstructions

Authors:

Gardner et al

Abstract:

Analysis of dredged samples from Gulden Draak Knoll demonstrate it is a submarine rifted continental fragment that lies at the boundary between the western Perth Abyssal Plain and Wharton Basin, Indian Ocean. The Knoll comprises a granulite facies basement, including pelitic paragneiss and mafic orthogneiss, with a Cambrian granite inferred to intrude the other rocks. Boulders and cobbles of felsic gneiss with Mesoproterozoic and Cambrian protolith ages were also sampled likely reflecting a complex basement to variable sedimentary and volcanic rocks. The U-Pb isotopic system in Archean and Mesoproterozoic zircon is significantly disturbed, reflecting Cambrian orogenesis that affected all samples. The protolith to garnet-sillimanite-biotite paragneiss has a maximum deposition age of 1163 ± 24 Ma and includes older detrital zircon grains with populations at c. 2.65 Ga and between 1.4-1.1 Ga. A younger population in this sample is interpreted as a mix of newly grown metamorphic zircon and isotopically reset zircon, implying the granulite facies metamorphism occurred at c. 511 ± 5 Ma. Protracted Cambrian orogenesis is indicated by a metamorphic age in the mafic orthogneiss of 530 ± 6 Ma and isotopic disturbance shortly following emplacement of granite (c. 540 Ma with zircon ages disturbed to 509 ± 7 Ma) and the protolith to the felsic orthogneiss (c. 528 Ma with zircon ages disturbed to 510 ± 3 Ma). Xenocrystic zircon grains in Cambrian rocks include Archean (c. 2839 ± 9 Ma) and Mesoproterozoic (1230–1370 Ma) populations also isotopically disturbed during Cambrian orogenesis. Igneous Cambrian zircon grains have less radiogenic Hf-isotope compositions (Hfi = 0.281821-0.281367) than Mesoproterozoic xenocrysts (Hfi = 0.282267-0.281993), indicating limited involvement of the Mesoproterozoic crust in granite production. A more likely source includes Archean crust represented by xenocrysts with Hfi = 0.281399-0.280863. The Gulden Draak Knoll is reconstructed in Gondwana (‘Leeuwin’ full-fit model) along strike of a major structure termed the Indo- Australo- Antarctic Suture (IAAS), recently mapped from geophysical interpretations in Wilkes Land, Antarctica. New isotopic data suggest basement rocks from the Gulden Draak Knoll have affinity to crust exposed either side of the IAAS. Determining if this structure is a suture zone sensu stricto remains to be tested.

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