A Tale of Two Cratons: The Slave Kaapvaal Workshop

الغلاف الأمامي
A. G. Jones, R.W. Carlson, H.S. Grütter
Gulf Professional Publishing, 11‏/03‏/2004 - 493 من الصفحات
Given the established nature of geoscientific knowledge of the Kaapvaal craton compared to the Slave craton, and given the exciting new interdisciplinary results coming from the Kaapvaal Project and from Slave craton studies, scientists working on both cratons were brought together in a workshop to compare and contrast the nature of these two cratons. Of the 54 papers presented at the workshop, 24 are included in this volume.



There are clearly major similarities and differences between these two Archean cratons. The crust of both was predominantly formed in the Mesoarchean. Both contain crustal sections consisting of terranes of different ages welded together by Archean accretionary events. Both crustal sections are underlain by lithospheric mantle sections consisting of peridotites that experienced extensive partial melt extraction between 2.9 Ga and 3.2 Ga, but this is where the similarities between the cratons end. One of the most striking differences between the Slave and Kaapvaal cartons is the apparent seismic homogeneity of the Kaapvaal craton's SCLM whereas the Slave craton is seismically layered. The seismic layering in the centre of the craton correlates laterally and with depth with electrical layering and geochemical layering.



Taken together, these differences suggest that SCLM formation was different for the two cratons, implying that the search for a single causative formation process is bound to fail.



Reprinted from the journal Lithos Volume 71, numbers 2-4.

 

المحتوى

Preface
95
ELSEVIER B V
99
Cratonic mantle roots remnants of a more chondritic Archean mantle?
135
implications for global kimberlite genesis and diamond exploration
153
evidence from crustal isostasy
185
a tool for investigating the mantle and exploring
195
The evolution of lithospheric mantle beneath the Kalahari Craton and its margins
215
Regional patterns in the paragenesis and age of inclusions in diamond diamond composition and the lithospheric seismic
243
Mantle structure and composition to 800km depth beneath southern Africa and surrounding oceans from broadband body
353
South African seismicity April 1997 to April 1999 and regional variations in the crust and uppermost mantle of the Kaapvaal
369
Pn arrivals and lateral variations of Moho geometry beneath the Kaapvaal craton
391
Crustal structure of the Kaapvaal craton and its significance for early crustal evolution
413
evidence for a Neoarchaean
431
A ReOs isotope and PGE study of kimberlitederived peridotite xenoliths from Somerset Island and a comparison to
461
Peridotitic diamonds from the Slave and the Kaapvaal cratonssimilarities and differences based on a preliminary data
489
The electrical structure of the Slave craton
505

Samples of Proterozoic ironenriched mantle from the Premier kimberlite
259
Mesozoic thermal evolution of the southern African mantle lithosphere
273
The origin of garnet and clinopyroxene in depleted Kaapvaal peridotites
289
ReOs systematics of diamondbearing eclogites from the Newlands kimberlite
323
Trace element geochemistry of coesitebearing eclogites from the Roberts Victor kimberlite Kaapvaal craton
337
Reprinted from LITHOS volume 7124
527
Two anisotropic layers in the Slave craton
529
a linked crustal and mantle perspective
575
Author index
591
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