Precambrian Research 114 (2002) 295 – 325
Mafic to felsic magmatism and crustal recycling in the
Obonga Lake greenstone belt, western Superior Province:
evidence from geochemistry, Nd isotopes and U – Pb
geochronology
Kirsty Y. Tomlinson
a,b,c,
*, Donald W. Davis
c
, John A. Percival
b
,
David J. Hughes
d
, Phil C. Thurston
a,e
a
Department of Earth Science, Laurentian Uniersity, Ramsey Lake Road, Sudbury, Ontario, Canada P3E 2C6
b
Continental Geoscience Diision, Geological Surey of Canada, 601 Booth Street, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada K1A 0E8
c
Jack Satterly Geochronology Laboratory, Department of Earth Science, Royal Ontario Museum, 100 Queen’s Park, Toronto,
Ontario, Canada M5S 2C6
d
School of Earth and Enironmental Sciences, Uniersity of Portsmouth, Burnaby Road, Portsmouth PO13QL, UK
e
Precambrian Geoscience Section, Ontario Geological Surey, 933 Ramsey Lake Road, Sudbury, Ontario, Canada P3E 6B5
Received 22 August 2001; accepted 28 November 2001
Abstract
The central Wabigoon Subprovince of the western Superior Province contains Mesoarchean granitoid and
supracrustal rocks (3.01–2.83 Ga) and 2.78–2.69 Ga granitoid plutons and supracrustal sequences. It is a key area
for understanding the relationship between greenstone belts and surrounding granitoid rocks that may have acted as
basement. The Obonga Lake greenstone belt contains two distinct assemblages: (1) a 2.724 Ga northern
assemblage consisting of sedimentary and mafic volcanic rocks; and (2) a ca. 2.73 Ga southern assemblage dominated
by gabbroic, mafic and felsic volcanic rocks. Mafic to ultramafic plutonic rocks separating the northern and southern
assemblages have been dated at 2733 7 Ma, similar in age to the volcanic rocks to the south. A 2690 1 Ma
gabbro – anorthosite pluton intrudes part of the northern assemblage. At the southern margin of the belt a granitoid
phase has been dated at 2930 Ma. This may represent an inherited component, but suggests the presence of
Mesoarchean basement to at least part of the greenstone belt. The northern assemblage mafic rocks are enriched in
light REE and HFSE and depleted in heavy REE. Despite being HFSE-enriched, mantle normalised abundances
show trends of La Ta Nb Th. They have
Nd
values of +0.7 to +2.4. A dacitic unit in the northern
assemblage has high La/Yb, high Sr/Y, low Nb, Y and heavy REE and is interpreted to represent a mantle-modified
slab melt similar to adakites in Cenozoic arcs. The associated enriched basalts may represent melts from the mantle
wedge modified by slab melt (adakitic) metasomatism, or they may represent an enriched (OIB-like) asthenospheric
source. Rocks of the southern assemblage mostly show Th and light REE enrichment and negative Nb and Ta
anomalies. Low
Nd
values (down to -0.9) can be modelled through contamination of a mafic liquid by 3.3–3.2 Ga
www.elsevier.com/locate/precamres
* Corresponding author. Tel.: +1-613-943-0143; fax: +1-613-995-7997.
E-mail address: ktomlins@nrcan.gc.ca (K.Y. Tomlinson).
0301-9268/02/$ - see front matter © 2002 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.
PII:S0301-9268(01)00232-7