Authors / CoAuthors
Reid, A. | Jagodzinski, E.A. | Fraser, G.L.
Abstract
The Glenloth Granite is an icon of South Australian geology, having been the site of some of the earliest gold workings in the central portion of what is now known as the Gawler Craton and the subject of some of the first radiometric age determinations in the 1960's. The Glenloth Granite forms part of the Neoarchaean to earliest Palaeoproterozoic belt of supracrustals and associated intrusives known as the Mulgathing Complex, which includes mafic to ultramafic (komatiitic) volcanics. Inferred to be syn-tectonic in nature in the original 1:250 000 scale mapping of the region, new SHRIMP data shows that the Glenloth Granite was emplaced at 2508 +/- 2 Ma, during period of magmatism that predates the ca. 2470 - 2420 Ma Sleafordian Orogeny. This orogenic event reworked the Glenloth Granite in to magmatitic gneiss and is responsible for two main generations of metamorphic zircon growth at 2453 +/- 4 Ma and 2427 +/- 3 Ma, likely reflecting initial prograde metamorphism followed by migmatite formation during biotite dehydration reactions, as has been documented from elsewhere in the Mulgathing Complex.
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nonGeographicDataset
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71628
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Cnr Jerrabomberra Ave and Hindmarsh Dr GPO Box 378
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- External Publication
- ( Theme )
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- geochronology
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- AU-SA
- Australian and New Zealand Standard Research Classification (ANZSRC)
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- Earth Sciences
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- Published_Internal
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2011-03-22T00:00:00
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