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High-Temperature Granite Magmatism, Crust–Mantle Interaction and the Mesoproterozoic Intracontinental Evolution of the Musgrave Province, Central Australia

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TLDR
The Pitjantjatjara Supersuite as discussed by the authors was formed by the breakdown of F-rich biotite in a crustal granulite, which was then partially cooled but were remobilized during subsequent under- and intraplating events.
Abstract
The Musgrave Province lies at the convergence of major structural trends formed during the Proterozoic amalgamation of the North, West and South Australian Cratons prior to c. 1290 Ma. The Musgrave Orogeny, one of three Mesoproterozoic orogenies to affect the province, produced the granites of the Pitjantjatjara Supersuite, which dominate the outcrop. This orogeny was an intracontinental and dominantly extensional event in which ultrahigh-temperature (UHT) conditions persisted from c. 1220 to c. 1120 Ma. The onset of UHT conditions is heralded by a change from low-Yb granites to voluminous Yb-enriched granites, reflecting a rapid decrease in crustal thickness. The Pitjantjatjara granites are ferroan, calc-alkalic to alkali-calcic rocks and include charnockites with an orthopyroxene-bearing primary mineralogy. They were emplaced at temperatures ≥1000°C from c. 1220 to c. 1150 Ma. Their geochemical and Nd and Hf isotopic homogeneity over a scale of >15 000 km 2 reflects a similarly homogeneous source. This source included an old enriched felsic crustal component. However, the bulk source was mafic to intermediate in composition. The long-lived UHT regime, and thermal limits on the amount of crust sustainable below the level of intrusion, indicates a significant (>50%) mantle-derived source component. However, a positive correlation between Mg-number and F suggests that many Pitjantjatjara granites formed through the breakdown of F-rich biotite in a crustal granulite. We suggest that under- and intraplated mafic magmas assimilated the limited available felsic crust into lower crustal MASH (melting, assimilation, storage, homogenization) domains. These partially cooled but were remobilized during subsequent under- and intra-plating events to produce the Pitjantjatjara granites. The duration of UHT conditions is inconsistent with a mantle plume. It reflects an intracontinental lithospheric architecture where the Musgrave Province was rigidly fixed at the nexus of three thick cratonic masses. This ensured that any asthenospheric upwelling was focused beneath the province, providing a constant supply of both heat and mantle-derived magma.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Zircon Th/U ratios in magmatic environs

TL;DR: In this article, a comprehensive database of zircon composition in West Australian magmatic rocks reveals negative correlations between both U and Th ZIRcon/whole rock ratio and the zircons saturation temperature, with the observed change with temperature less for U(zircon/Whole rock) than for Th(Zircon-whole-rock).
Journal ArticleDOI

On ultrahigh temperature crustal metamorphism: phase equilibria, trace element thermometry, bulk composition, heat sources, timescales and tectonic settings

TL;DR: In this article, a ferric iron activity-composition thermodynamic model for sapphirine was developed, allowing phase diagram calculations for oxidised rock compositions and quantification of UHT conditions via trace element thermometry, with Zr-inrutile more commonly recording higher temperatures than Ti-inzircon.
Journal ArticleDOI

Th/U ratios in metamorphic zircon

TL;DR: Yakymchuk et al. as mentioned in this paper presented the Th/U ratios in metamorphic zircon, which has been published in the Journal of Metamorphic Geology.
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Contrasting styles of Phanerozoic and Precambrian continental collision

TL;DR: In this paper, a series of experiments were run using a 2-D petrological-thermomechanical numerical model in which the collision of spontaneously moving continental plates was simulated for values of ambient upper-mantle temperature and radiogenic heat production increasing from those appropriate to the present-day.
Journal ArticleDOI

Granitic Pegmatites as Reflections of Their Sources

TL;DR: Pegmatites accentuate the trace-element signatures of their origins, and through that signature pegmatites can commonly be attributed to origins from granites whose source characteristics are known and distinctive as mentioned in this paper.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Trace element discrimination diagrams for the tectonic interpretation of granitic rocks

TL;DR: In this article, a data bank containing over 600 high quality trace element analyses of granites from known settings was used to demonstrate using ORG-normalized geochemical patterns and element-SiO2 plots that most of these granite groups exhibit distinctive trace element characteristics.
Journal ArticleDOI

A-type granites: geochemical characteristics, discrimination and petrogenesis

TL;DR: A-type granites as mentioned in this paper were found to have high SiO2, Na2O+K2O, Fe/Mg, Ga/Al, Zr, Nb, Ga, Y and Ce, and low CaO and Sr.
Journal ArticleDOI

Zircon saturation revisited: temperature and composition effects in a variety of crustal magma types

TL;DR: In this article, the saturation behavior of zircon in crustal anatectic melts as a function of both temperature and composition has been studied and a model of Zr solubility given by: In D Zr Zircon/melt = −3.80−[0.85(M−1)]+12900/T where T is the absolute temperature, and M is the cation ratio (Na + K + 2Ca)/(Al · Si).
Journal ArticleDOI

A geochemical classification for granitic rocks

TL;DR: Barbarin et al. as mentioned in this paper used the modified alkali-lime index (MALI) and the aluminum saturation (ASI) for the classification of caledonian post-orogenic granites.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Hf isotope composition of cratonic mantle: LAM-MC-ICPMS analysis of zircon megacrysts in kimberlites

TL;DR: In this article, the isotopic composition of Hf has been measured in 124 mantle-derived zircon megacrysts from African, Siberian and Australian kimberlites, using a laser-ablation microprobe (LAM) and a multi-collector ICPMS.
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