Autor: |
Sindhuja, C S, Duraiswami, Raymond A, Rao, B K Nagaraja, Manikyamba, C, Reddy, N Ramakrishna |
Předmět: |
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Zdroj: |
Journal of Earth System Science; Mar2024, Vol. 133 Issue 1, p1-16, 16p |
Abstrakt: |
Volcaniclastic deposits are cynosures for reconstructing volcanic archives and evaluating the tectonic imprints of the study area. This paper presents an elaborate geological field litholog, petrography and geochemistry of ~1.2 km thick sequence of the quartz-feldspar porphyry (QFP) and rhyolites in the Kadiri–Hindupur section of the Kadiri Greenstone belt from Eastern Dharwar Craton (EDC). The QFP exhibits primary stratification; the thickness of the beds varies from very thin to thick (3–8 cm) and shows large-scale tabular cross-bedding in the lower half of the section. The bedding surfaces of QFPs are marked by current crescent-shaped marks (long axis: 5–25 cm, short axis: 2–8 cm), speculated as possible remnants of volcanic bombs and pyroclastic debris during the explosive volcanism. Petrographically, these QFPs are characterised by spectacular blue opalescent quartz grains with embayed grain boundaries, anhedral feldspar with sieved texture, fractured plagioclase and polycrystalline groundmass suggesting a volcaniclastic origin. They are also endowed with significant post-depositional textures such as domino-listric faulting and sigma-shaped porphyroblasts. Geochemically, QFPs are unaltered with trachyte-trachy dacite compositions showing high-potash, calc-alkaline nature displaying shoschonitic affinity. The primitive mantle normalised trace and rare earth elements are marked by an enriched LREE-LILE pattern coupled by negative zircon–hafnium, niobium–tantalum and titanium anomalies affirming their common genetic link to a prominent island arc–back-arc system where explosive volcanism produced the felsic crystal tuffs that were deposited and preserved as volcaniclastic QFP. The associated blocks and bombs produced the current crescent-shaped marks preserved on the bedding surfaces of QFPs. Research highlights: Research Highlights Quartz-feldspar porphyry (~1.2 km thick) occurs in the Kadiri Greenstone Belt, Eastern Dharwar Craton. Blue opalescent quartz and deformed plagioclase porphyry indicate volcaniclastic origin. Enigmatic current crescent-shaped marks represent remnants of volcanic bombs and pyroclastic debris. The primitive mantle normalised REE diagram is characterised by LREE-LILE enrichment. They represent Neoarchean pyroclastic volcanism and sedimentation in an island arc–back-arc setup. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR] |
Databáze: |
Complementary Index |
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