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  • Paleoarchean rocks of the tonalite-trondhjemite-granodiorite (TTG) series require a basaltic source region more enriched in K, LILE, Th and LREE than the low-K tholeiites typical of Archean supracrustal sequences. Most TTG of the Pilbara Craton, in northwestern Australia, formed between 3.5 and 3.42 Ga through infracrustal melting of a source older than 3.5 Ga. Basaltic to andesitic rocks of the 3.51 Ga Coucal Formation, at the base of the Pilbara Supergroup, are amongst the only well-preserved remnants of pre-3.5 Ga supracrustal material on Earth, and may have formed a large proportion of pre-3.5 Ga Pilbara crust. These rocks are significantly enriched in K, LILE, Th and LREE compared to post-3.5 Ga Paleoarchean basalts and andesites, and form a compositionally suitable source for TTG. Enrichment in these basalts was not the result of crustal assimilation but was inherited from a mantle source that was less depleted than modern MORBsource and was enriched in recycled crustal components.We suggest that the formation of Paleoarchean TTG and of their voluminous mafic source regions reflects both a primitive stage in the thermal and compositional evolution of the mantle and a significant prehistory of crustal recycling.

  • In addition to typical seafloor VHMS deposits, the ~3240 Ma Panorama district contains contemporaneous greisen- and vein-hosted Mo-Cu-Zn-Sn occurrences that hosted by the Strelley granite complex, which drove VHMS circulation. High-temperature alteration zones in volcanic rocks underlying the VHMS deposits are dominated by quartz-chlorite±albite assemblages, with lesser low-temperature quartz-sericite±K-feldspar assemblages, typical of VHMS hydrothermal systems. Alteration assemblages associated with granite-hosted greisens and veins, which do not extend into the overlying volcanc pile, include quartz-topaz-muscovite-fluorite and quartz-muscovite(sericite)-chlorite-ankerite. Fluid inclusion and stable isotope data suggest that the greisens formed from high temperature (~590C), high salinity (38-56 wt % NaCl equiv) fluids with high densities (>1.3 g/cm3) and high -18O (9.3±0.6-), which are compatible with magmatic fluids evolved from the Strelley granite complex. Fluids in the volcanic pile (including the VHMS ore-forming fluids) were of lower temperature (90-270C), lower salinity (5.0-11.2 wt % NaCl equiv), with lower densities (0.88-1.01 g/cm3) and lower -18O (-0.8±2.6), compatible with evolved Paleoarchean seawater. Fluids that formed the quartz-chalcopyrite-sphalerite-cassiterite veins, which are present within the upper granite complex, were intermediate in temperature and isotopic composition (T = 240-315C; -18O = 4.3±1.5-) and are interpreted to indicate mixing between the two end-member fluids. Evidence of mixing between evolved seawater and magmatic-hydrothermal fluid in the granite complex, along with a lack of evidence for a magmatic component in fluids from the volcanic pile, suggest partitioning of magmatic-hydrothermal from evolved seawater hydrothermal systems in the Panorama VHMS system, interpreted as a consequence swamping of the system by evolved seawater or density contrasts.

  • Initial lead isotope ratios from Archean volcanic-hosted massive sulfide (VHMS) and lode gold deposits and neodymium isotope model ages from igneous rocks from the geological provinces that host these deposits identify systematic spatial and temporal patterns, both within and between the provinces. The Abitibi-Wawa Subprovince of the Superior Province is characterized by highly juvenile lead and neodymium. Most other Archean provinces, however, are characterized by more evolved isotopes, although domains within them can be characterized by juvenile isotope ratios. Metal endowment (measured as the quantity of metal contained in geological resources per unit surface area) of VHMS and komatiite-associated nickel sulfide (KANS) deposits is related to the isotopic character, and therefore the tectonic history, of provinces that host these deposits. Provinces with extensive juvenile crust have significantly higher endowment of VHMS deposits, possibly as a consequence of higher heat flow and extension-related faults. Provinces with evolved crust have higher endowment of KANS deposits, possibly because such crust provided either a source of sulfur or a stable substrate for komatiite emplacement. In any case, initial radiogenic isotope ratios can be useful in predicting the endowment of Archean terranes for VHMS and KANS deposits. Limited data suggest similar relationships may hold in younger terranes.

  • Amino acid racemization (AAR) dating of the eolianite on Lord Howe Island is used to correlate several disparate successions and provides a geochronological framework that ranges from Holocene to Middle Pleistocene time. The reliability of the AAR data is assessed by analysing multiple samples from individual lithostratigraphic units, checking the stratigraphic order of the D/L ratios and the consistency of the relative extents of racemization for a suite of seven amino acids. Three aminozones are defined on the basis of the extent of racemization of amino acids in land snails (Placostylus bivaricosus) and 'whole-rock' eolianite samples. Aminozone A includes Placostylus from modern soil horizons (e.g. mean D/L-leucine ratio of 0.03±0.01) and whole-rock samples from unconsolidated lagoonal and beach deposits (0.10±0.01-0.07±0.03). Aminozone B includes Placostylus (0.45±0.03) and whole-rock samples from beach (0.48±0.01) and dune (0.45±0.02-0.30±0.02) units of the Neds Beach Formation, deposited during OIS 5. The oldest, Aminozone C, comprises Placostylus recovered from paleosols (0.76±0.02) and whole-rock eolianite samples (0.62±0.00) from the Searles Point Formation, which indicate the formation was likely deposited over several Oxygen Isotope Stages (OIS), during and prior to OIS 7. These data support independent lithostratigraphic interpretations and are in broad agreement with U/Th ages of speleothems from the Searles Point Formation and corals from the Neds Beach Formation, and with several TL ages of dune units in both formations. The AAR data reveal that eolianite deposition extends over a significantly longer time interval than previously appreciated and indicate that the deposition of the large dune units is linked to periods of relatively high sea level.

  • The Archean Yilgarn Craton of Western Australia, is not only one of the largest extant fragments of Archean crust in the world, but is also one of the most richly-mineralised regions in the world. Understanding the evolution of the craton is important, therefore, for constraining Archean geodynamics, and the influence of such on Archean mineral systems. The Yilgarn Craton is dominated by felsic intrusive rocks - over 70% of the rock types. As such these rocks hold a significant part of the key to understanding the four-dimensional evolution of the craton, providing constraints on the nature and timing of crustal growth, the role of the mantle, and also the timing of important switches in crustal growth geodynamics. The granites also provide constraints on the nature and age of the crustal domains within the craton. Importantly, this crustal pre-history appears to have exerted a significant, but poorly understood, spatial control on the distribution of mineral systems, such as gold, komatiite-associated nickel sulphide and volcanic-hosted massive sulphide (VHMS) base metal systems

  • Devonian-Carboniferous granites are widespread in Tasmania. In the east they intrude the Ordovician-Early Devonian quartzwacke turbidites of the Mathinna Supergroup, whereas the western Tasmanian granites intrude a more diverse terrane of predominantly shelf sequences, with depositional ages extending probably back to the Late Mesoproterozoic. The earliest (~400 Ma) I-type granodiorites in the east may be arc-related and pre-date the Tabberabberan Orogeny (~388 Ma), which appears to represent the juxtaposition of the two terranes. Subsequently more felsic and finally strongly fractionated I- and S-type granites were emplaced until ~373 Ma. In western Tasmania, mostly felsic and fractionated I- and S-types granites were emplaced from ~374-351 Ma, possibly in response to back-arc or post-collisional crustal extension

  • In this paper, we present a high resolution study focussed mainly on the Gorgon field and associated Rankin Trend gas fields, Carnarvon Basin, Australia (Figure 1). These gas fields are characterized by numerous stacked reservoirs with varying CO2 contents and provide a relevant natural laboratory for characterizing CO2 migration, dissolution and reaction by looking at chemical characteristics of the different reservoirs (Figure 2). The data we present reveal interesting trends for CO2 mol% and -13C both spatially and with each other as observed by Edwards et al. (2007). Our interpretation of the data suggests that mineral carbonation in certain fields can be significant and relatively rapid. The Gorgon and Rankin Trend fields natural gases may therefore be a unique natural laboratory, which give further insights into the rates and extent of carbonate mineral sequestration as applied to carbon storage operations.

  • The New England Orogen (NEO) forms the easternmost part of continental Australia, being one of a number of identified orogenic belts within the Tasman Orogenic Zone of eastern Australia. The NEO borders parts of the Lachlan, Thomson and North Queensland Orogens (see Fig. 1), though actual contacts are largely obscured by the Sydney-Gunnedah-Bowen basin system and other cover rocks. The NEO consists of a collage of terranes and has a complex history that stretches from the Neoproterozoic to the Late Mesozoic, although most of the exposed geology is Devonian and younger. A major characteristic of the NEO in this convergent margin setting is the voluminous Carboniferous to Triassic magmatism, which forms a major component of the orogen. Importantly, this magmatism is not confined to the NEO. Carboniferous to mid Triassic felsic magmatism (ca. 350-220 Ma) (Post-Kanimblan Orogeny to Hunter-Bowen Orogeny) forms a major part of the Tasman Orogenic Zone, extending in a wide belt from central New South Wales (the Bathurst region) to islands within the Torres Straits, straddling the Lachlan, Thomson, New England and North Queensland Orogens (Fig. 1), as well as extending into the Proterozoic basement west of the Tasman Orogenic Zone in northern Queensland (Fig. 1). As such, the geochemical and isotopic characteristics of these magmatic rocks, and their regional variations, have the potential to provide significant information regarding the nature and age of the crust in these orogens, as well as to provide constraints on the relationship of the development of the NEO to the neighbouring orogens.

  • The Victoria and Birrindudu Basins of the Victoria River region, NW Northern Territory, represent a pair of stacked unmetamorphosed Palaeoproterozoic to Neoproterozoic basins unconformably overlying low-grade metamorphic basement. SHRIMP U-Pb analysis of detrital zircons provide a basis for lithostratigraphic correlations with other Proterozoic Basins across northern Australia. The Palaeoproterozoic Stirling Sandstone (basal Limbunya Group) is tentatively correlated with the Mount Charles Formation in the Tanami region. The Jasper Gorge Sandstone (basal Auvergne Group) correlates with basal units of the lower Cryogenian Supersequence 1 of the Centralian Superbasin (Heavitree Quartzite and its correlatives). A third correlation, previously proposed elsewhere and further explored here, suggests that the Duerdin Group may correlate with the upper Cryogenian ca. 635 Ma 'Marinoan' glacigenic units of Supersequence 3 of Centralian Superbasin. In particular, the Cryogenian pre-glacigenic Black Point Sandstone Member (basal Duerdin Group) is dominated by detrital zircons with age components characteristic of the Musgrave Complex, implying significant exhumation and erosion of the Musgrave Complex occurred, at least partially, prior to the end of the Cryogenian (<ca. 635 Ma) far earlier than generally thought. The latter two correlations suggest that the Victoria Basin in the Victoria River region represents yet another relic component of the extensive former Centralian Superbasin, at least during Cryogenian time. Sm-Nd whole rock determinations overwhelmingly, and unsurprisingly, are consistent with clastic derivation from the evolved North Australian Craton and, for the Black Point Sandstone Member, from the Musgrave Complex. A relatively juvenile signature ('Ndt ' +1) is observed coincident with aerial volcanism within the Birrindudu Basin at ca. 1640 Ma as has been recently noted in other Australian Palaeoproterozoic terrains.