Metasomatized and hybrid rocks associated with a Palaeoarchaean layered ultramafic intrusion on the Johannesburg Dome, South Africa

Metasomatized and hybrid rocks associated with a Palaeoarchaean layered ultramafic intrusion on the Johannesburg Dome, South Africa

Author: 
Anhaeusser, Carl R.
Publisher: 
Elsevier
Date published: 
2015
Record type: 
Journal Title: 
Journal of African Earth Sciences
Source: 
Journal of African Earth Sciences, Vol 102, February 2015, pp. 203-217
Abstract: 

The Johannesburg Dome occurs as an inlier of Palaeoarchaean–Mesoarchaean granitic rocks, gneisses and greenstones in the central part of the Kaapvaal Craton, South Africa. In the west-central part of the dome a large greenstone remnant is surrounded and intruded by ca. 3114 Ma porphyritic granodiorites. Referred to locally as the Zandspruit greenstone remnant, it consists of a shallow-dipping ultramafic complex comprised of a number of alternating layers of harzburgite and pyroxenite. The ultramafic rocks are metamorphosed to greenschist grade and have largely been altered to serpentinite and amphibolite (tremolite–actinolite). In the granite–greenstone contact areas the porphyritic granodiorite has partially assimilated the greenstones producing a variety of hybrid rocks of dioritic composition. The hybrid rocks contain enclaves or xenoliths of greenstone and, in places, orbicular granite structures. Particularly noteworthy is an unusual zone of potash-metasomatized rock, occurring adjacent to the porphyritic granodiorite, consisting dominantly of biotite and lesser amounts of carbonate, quartz and sericite. Large potash-feldspar megacrysts and blotchy aggregated feldspar clusters give the rocks a unique texture. An interpretation placed on these rocks is that they represent metasomatized metapyroxenites of the layered ultramafic complex. Field relationships and geochemical data suggest that the rocks were influenced by hydrothermal fluids emanating from the intrusive porphyritic granodiorite. The adjacent greenstones were most likely transformed largely by the process of infiltration metasomatism, rather than simple diffusion, as CO2, H2O as well as dissolved components were added to the greenstones. Element mobility appears to have been complex as those generally regarded as being immobile, such as Ti, Y, Zr, Hf, Ta, Nb, Th, Sc, Ni, Cr, V, and Co, have undergone addition or depletion from the greenstones. Relative to all the rocks analyzed from the greenstones, the surrounding granitoids, and the hybrid rocks, those from the Zandspruit metasomatized zone show prominent enrichment of K2O, TiO2, Al2O3, Rb, Y, Zr, Nb, Ba, Th and U and depletion in MgO, FeOt, CaO, Cr, Co and Ni.

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CITATION: Anhaeusser, Carl R.. Metasomatized and hybrid rocks associated with a Palaeoarchaean layered ultramafic intrusion on the Johannesburg Dome, South Africa . : Elsevier , 2015. Journal of African Earth Sciences, Vol 102, February 2015, pp. 203-217 - Available at: https://library.au.int/frmetasomatized-and-hybrid-rocks-associated-palaeoarchaean-layered-ultramafic-intrusion-johannesburg-6