Sinistral transpression and hydrothermal activity during emplacement of the Early Proterozoic Julianehåb batholith, Ketilidian orogenic belt, South Greenland

Authors

  • B Chadwick
  • P Erfurt
  • T Frisch
  • R.A Frith
  • A.A Garde
  • H.K Schønwandt
  • H Stendal
  • B Thomassen

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.34194/rapggu.v163.8264

Abstract

The first systematic investigations of the central part of the Early Proterozoic Ketilidian orogen in the vicinity of Søndre Sermilik in the early 1960s suggested that this part of the orogen comprised a mixture of the Julianehåb granite, altered supracrustal rocks and older orthogneisses. Recent field work has shown that the area consists only of a variably deformed suite of granitic to dioritic plutonic rocks and a range of hornblende-bearing dykes of the appinite suite which all belong to the Julianehåb batholith. Steep to vertical shear zones with widths from a few centimetres to more than one kilometre are a significant element of the structure. The principal shear zones trend north-east and they are parallel to the schistosity and subhorizontal linear structures in the granitoid rocks. Kinematic indicators in many of the shear zones indicate sinistral transcurrent displacements. The relationships between granite fabrics, shear zones and mafic dykes suggest that the Julianehåb batholith was emplaced during subduction from the south towards the Archaean craton in the north-west in a sinistral transpressional system. Effects of hydrothermal alteration, mainly in the form of quartz veining, silicification, chloritisation, epidotisation and pyritisation, are common within and adjacent to the largest shear zones. These effects are believed to be related to late stages of the evolution of the batholith. Gold anomalies appear to be closely tied to the hydrothermal phenomena.

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Published

1994-01-01

How to Cite

Chadwick, B., Erfurt, P., Frisch, T., Frith, R., Garde, A., Schønwandt, H., Stendal, H., & Thomassen, B. (1994). Sinistral transpression and hydrothermal activity during emplacement of the Early Proterozoic Julianehåb batholith, Ketilidian orogenic belt, South Greenland. Rapport Grønlands Geologiske Undersøgelse, 163, 5–22. https://doi.org/10.34194/rapggu.v163.8264