Ti-rich plagioclase-phyric dykes of southern West Greenland
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.34194/rapggu.v135.7997Abstract
The investigation of Proterozoic basic dykes in southern West Greenland stemmed from the programme of systematic mapping of the Archaean craton in that region by the Geological Survey of Greenland (GGU). This work began in the southern Frederikshåb region in the early 1960s (Jensen, 1968, 1969) and progressed northwards, from bases in the Fiskenæsset (Kalsbeek & Myers, 1973; GGU, 1976), Godthåb (Allaart et al., 1977) and Sukkertoppen areas (Allaart et al., 1978). The results of most of this mapping work were summarized by Bridgwater et al. (1976) and compiled onto a 1:500 000 scale geological map sheet by Allaart (1982). The distribution of the major Proterozoic dykes which cut the entire region is shown on this map. While the basic dykes are individually minor intrusions, many are up to 50 metres wide and continuous for several tens of kilometres, and collectively they represent a major magmatic event. As many of the Archaean terrains of the world possess Proterozoic basic dyke swarms, their compositions are crucial to a correlation of events from one craton to another and to an understanding of crustal and mantle evolution after the world-wide late Archaean sialic crust-forming event.
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