Geodynamic Implications of Synchronous Norite and TTG Formation in the 3 Ga Maniitsoq Norite Belt, West Greenland

2020 
We present new data for the ~3.0 Ga Maniitsoq Norite Belt of the Akia Terrane, West Greenland, with the aim of understanding its petrogenesis. The Maniitsoq Norite Belt is hosted in regional TTG and dioritic orthogneisses, intruded by later sheets of TTG and granite pegmatites, and comprises two main rock types: plagioclase-rich ‘norites’ and pyroxene-rich ‘melanorites’. Both norites and melanorites have high SiO2 contents (52 – 60 wt% SiO2), high bulk rock Mg# (0.57 – 0.83), and low TiO2 contents (0.1 – 0.7 wt%). Their trace element patterns are defined by depleted HREEs, highly enriched LREEs, negative anomalies in Nb, Ta, and Ti, and variable anomalies in Zr, Hf, and Eu. New zircon U-Pb geochronology data and previously published ages establish an emplacement age of 3013 ± 1 Ma for the majority of the Maniitsoq Norite Belt, with magmatism continuing until 3001 ± 3 Ma. This ~12 Myr period of norite magmatism is coeval with an ongoing period of TTG production in the Akia Terrane. Norite Belt emplacement was closely followed by high temperature, low pressure granulite-facies metamorphism at ~800 °C and 900 °C/GPa) and that the norite magmas were emplaced into thin crust and lithosphere. Compositions of the norites and melanorites can be explained by derivation from a single mafic parental melt (~13 wt% MgO), with the norites predominantly accumulating plagioclase and the melanorites predominantly accumulating pyroxene. Evidence from field relationships, the presence of xenocrystic zircon, major element compositions and combined trace element and Hf-isotope modelling suggests the norites were contaminated by assimilation of ~20 – 30% continental TTG crust. Geochemical and Hf-Nd isotopic constraints indicate that the norite mantle source was depleted, and that this depletion occurred significantly before the emplacement of the norite magmas. Contemporaneous production of both TTGs and norite, their emplacement in thin crust, and the rapid transition to high temperature, low pressure granulite-facies metamorphism is best explained by their formation in an ultra-hot orogeny. Formation of norites in this setting may be restricted to > 2.7 Ga, when geothermal gradients were higher on Earth.
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