Precambrian Research 227 (2013) 4–28
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Precambrian Research
journal homepage: www.elsevier.com/locate/precamres
The lower crust of the Dharwar Craton, Southern India: Patchwork of Archean
granulitic domains
Jean-Jacques Peucat
a,∗
, Mudlappa Jayananda
b
, Dominique Chardon
c
, Ramon Capdevila
d
,
C. Mark Fanning
e
, Jean-Louis Paquette
f
a
Géosciences-Rennes, UPR 4661 CNRS, Université de Rennes I, 35042 Rennes Cedex, France
b
Departement of Geology, Centre of Advanced Studies, University of Delhi, 110 007, India
c
Université de Toulouse, GET (CNRS, IRD), UPS (OMP), 14 avenue Edouard Belin, 31400 Toulouse, France
d
Open Université de Lézignan-la-Sèbe, France
e
Research School of Earth Sciences, ANU, Canberra, Australia
f
Université Blaise Pascal, Laboratoire Magmas et Volcans, UMR CNRS 6524, IRD R163, LMV. BP 10448, F-63000 Clermont Ferrand, France
article info
Article history:
Received 4 January 2012
Received in revised form 8 June 2012
Accepted 11 June 2012
Available online 13 July 2012
Keywords:
Paleoarchean
Neoarchean
U–Pb geochronology
Geochemistry
Structure
Dharwar Craton
Granulites
South India
abstract
U–Pb geochronological, major and trace element and isotope geochemical data identify crustal domains
of contrasted petrological origins and histories in the lower crust of the Dharwar Craton, all affected by
granulite facies metamorphism and deformation in the Neoarchean. Four lower crustal domains have
been identified and investigated across the Neoarchean amphibolite to granulite facies transition zone.
(1) In the southern part of the Western Dharwar Craton (WDC), high-grade metamorphism affects rocks
formed before 3.0 Ga. High-grade metamorphism is recorded at ca 2.51 Ga, followed by possible complex
cooling and/resetting until 2.2 Ga. (2) The BR Hills–MM Hills domain represents the lower crust of the
Central Dharwar Province (CDP) which is here defined as a transitional crust between the old (>3 Ga)
WDC and the Eastern Dharwar Province (EDP), not older than 2.7 Ga. This granulitic domain contains the
oldest rocks of the Dharwar Craton with TTG suites formed at ca 3.4 Ga and ca 2.6 Ga suites of probable
crustal recycling origin. Both suites are involved in 2513 ± 5 Ma granulite facies metamorphism. (3) The
Nilgiri granulitic domain is tectonically juxtaposed with the deepest level of the WDC as a consequence
of Neoarchean dextral slip along the Moyar shear zone. The massif consists of rocks of orogenic affinities
formed between 2.70 and 2.56 Ga and overprinted by granulite facies metamorphism at 2518 ± 10 Ma. (4)
The Krishnagiri domain exposes the deepest levels of the Eastern Dharwar Craton. It is composed of TTG
and calc-alkaline igneous protoliths formed between 2.55 and 2.53 Ga. Migmatization in the upper part
of the domain took place at 2507 ± 6 Ma and granulite facies overprint in the deepest parts of the domain
is constrained at 2516 ± 5 Ma. The Krishnagiri domain was magmatically accreted to the lower crust of
both the CDP and EDP by interaction with mafic magmatism, inducing reworking of the 2.7–2.6 Ga or
older overlying crust. The Nilgiri granulites share several temporal and petrological properties with the
Madras granulites that make the easternmost outcrop of the Dharwar Craton. We tentatively suggest
that the Nilgiri and Madras granulites evolved as parts of a common Madras domain in the lower crust
of the EDP before activation of the Moyar shear zone. In this sense, the Nilgiri massif may be considered
as an allochtonous unit in a context of Neoarchean ultra hot orogeny in South India.
© 2012 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
1. Introduction
The interplay of high-grade metamorphism, magmatism and
deformation in the lower crust is one of the keys to understanding
∗
Corresponding author.
E-mail addresses: peucat@univ-rennes1.fr (J.-J. Peucat),
mjayananda@rediffmail.com (M. Jayananda), dominique.chardon@get.obs-mip.dfr
(D. Chardon), rs.capdevila@wanadoo.fr (R. Capdevila), Prise.Fanning@anu.edu.au
(C.M. Fanning), paquette@opgc.univ-bpclermont.fr (J.-L. Paquette).
how continents have grown, how they have been amalgamated and
also dislocated through time. It is thus critical to map and charac-
terize the nature and origin of the rocks involved in granulite facies
terrains in order to constrain the spatial and temporal framework
of the magmatic and metamorphic events they have undergone.
Granulites exposed in the wide crustal transition of the Dharwar
Craton in Southern India constitute a world-class reference for the
study of the Archean lower crust (e.g. Pichamuthu, 1960; Janardhan
et al., 1979a, 1982; Newton, 1990). However, only a rough age
and petrological/geochemical zonation pattern is established so
far for the Dharwar granulites, which points to large – but poorly
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.precamres.2012.06.009