Abstract
The northern Kaapvaal craton is divided into three distinct crustal zones: 1) the high-grade Southern Marginal Zone (SMZ) of the Limpopo belt in the north; 2) a transitional zone of tectonically stacked metamorphic rocks which includes the area from the Sutherland belt in the north to the Pietersburg and Murchison belts in the south; and 3) a low-grade granite-greenstone terrane farther to the south. The change across the SMZ boundary is expressed by an overall increase in the grade of metamorphism, a strip of retrogression related to a zone of thrusting, abrupt changes in intensity of deformation, rock densities, magnetic lineament patterns, and isotopic ages in compositionally similar rocks. Regional metamorphism in the northern Kaapvaal craton is demonstrably not a continuum in the sense that the highest-grade rocks underwent all earlier stages of metamorphism; rather, that rapid local tectonic processes must have occurred. A proposed evolutionary path for the SMZ was initiated with crustal thickening during the collision of the two continents in the Late Archean. Tectonic burial and superimposition of granulite facies metamorphism was followed by upward movement of deeper crustal rocks and thrusting onto the adjacent transition zone. The original collisional record in the granulite terrane was, however, obliterated by the later mainly upward response of the thickened crust. -from Authors
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 549-560 |
Number of pages | 12 |
Journal | Journal of Geology |
Volume | 96 |
Issue number | 5 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 1988 |
ASJC Scopus subject areas
- Geology