Geosystems and Geoenvironment (Aug 2024)

Tectono-metamorphic evolution of the Central Bundelkhand Craton, India from geochemistry and bulk composition modelling of amphibolite enclaves

  • Pratigya Pathak,
  • Ravi Ranjan Kumar,
  • Shyam Bihari Dwivedi

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 3, no. 3
p. 100287

Abstract

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The Bundelkhand Craton (BuC) represents a significant Archean terrane within the northern Indian Craton and yet its tectono-metamorphic evolutionary history remains relatively understudied. Our investigation involves detailed petrography, geochemistry, and bulk composition modeling of both garnet-bearing and garnet-absent amphibolites with a two-fold objective: (i) to constrain the protolithic nature and tectonic settings involved in the genesis of these rocks, and (ii) to propose a tectono-metamorphic evolutionary history for the BuC. The BuC amphibolites originate from basalt and andesitic-basalt protoliths. Their trace element compositions reveal negative anomalies in Nb, Ta, and Ti, while their rare earth element (REE) normalized patterns indicate enrichment in light REEs over heavy REEs. The basaltic protolith is interpreted to have formed during orogeny in a compressional tectonic regime at the active margins of island arcs in a subduction-related setting. This interpretation is supported by various discrimination plots for amphibolites, such as Nb/Th vs Zr/Nb, Zr vs Zr/Y, and Th/Nb vs Ce/Nb, as well as high Th/Yb and low Nb/Yb contents— all of which suggest an island arc setting influenced by subduction. These amphibolites have undergone three distinct phases of metamorphism, as evidenced by petrography, mineral chemistry, and bulk composition modeling. This interpretation is further supported by geochemical discrimination diagrams which indicate that a subduction tectonic setting was active during peak metamorphism. During the pre-peak phase, the garnet-bearing amphibolites experienced pressure and temperature conditions ranging from 6.25 to 6.5 kbar and 580 to 590ºC, while the garnet-absent amphibolites underwent conditions from 5.0 to 5.8 kbar and 400 to 450ºC. Peak metamorphism was observed at pressures ranging from 6.8 to 7.4 kbar and temperatures from 760 to 805ºC for the garnet-bearing amphibolites, and at pressures from 7.0 to 7.4 kbar and temperatures from 785 to 810ºC for the garnet-absent amphibolites. The metamorphic retrograde conditions for the garnet-bearing amphibolites are defined by P-T conditions ranging from 4.45 to 4.75 kbar and 585 to 615ºC, while for the garnet-absent amphibolites, it ranges from 3.1 to 4.0 kbar and 620 to 710ºC. The mineral assemblages and P-T conditions delineate a clockwise P-T path for both, garnet-bearing and garnet-absent amphibolites from the Babina and Mauranipur regions. This suggests that the rocks underwent a burial process amid subduction tectonic settings in an arc-related environment, followed by a decompression stage that brought them to the surface.

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