Archean Granitoids of India: Windows into Early Earth Tectonics
Granitoids form the bulk of the Archean continental crust and preserve key information on early Earth evolution. India hosts five main Archean cratonic blocks (Aravalli, Bundelkhand, Singhbhum, Bastar and Dharwar). This book summarizes the available information on Archean granitoids of Indian cratons. The chapters cover a broad spectrum of themes related to granitoid typology, emplacement mechanism, petrogenesis, phase-equilibria modelling, temporal distribution, tectonic setting, and their roles in fluid evolution, metal delivery and mineralizations. The book presents a broader picture incorporating regional- to cratons-scale comparisons, implications for Archean geodynamic processes, and temporal changes thereof. This synthesis work, integrating modern concepts on granite petrology and crustal evolution, offers an irreplaceable body of reference information for any geologist interested in Archean Indian granitoids.
Archean granitoids of India: windows into early Earth tectonics – an introduction
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Published:December 14, 2020
Abstract
Granitoids form the dominant component of Archean cratons. They are generated by partial melting of diverse crustal and mantle sources and subsequent differentiation of the primary magmas, and are formed through a variety of geodynamic processes. Granitoids, therefore, are important archives for early Earth lithospheric evolution. Peninsular India comprises five cratonic blocks bordered by mobile belts. The cratons that stabilized during the Paleoarchean–Mesoarchean (Singhbhum and Western Dharwar) recorded mostly diapirism or sagduction tectonics. Conversely, cratons that stabilized during the late Neoarchean (Eastern Dharwar, Bundelkhand, Bastar and Aravalli) show evidence consistent with terrane accretion–collision in a convergent setting. Thus, the Indian cratons provide testimony to a transition from a dominantly pre-plate tectonic regime in the Paleoarchean–Mesoarchean to a plate-tectonic-like regime in the late Neoarchean. Despite this diversity, all five cratons had a similar petrological evolution with a long period (250–850 myr) of episodic tonalite–trondhjemite–granodiorite (TTG) magmatism followed by a shorter period (30–100 myr) of granitoid diversification (sanukitoid, K-rich anatectic granite and A-type granite) with signatures of input from both mantle and crust. The contributions of this Special Publication cover diverse granitoid-related themes, highlighting the potential of Indian cratons in addressing global issues of Archean crustal evolution.
- A-type granites
- accretion
- anatexis
- Aravalli Supergroup
- Archean
- Asia
- Bastar Craton
- Bundelkhand
- cratons
- crust
- Dharwar Craton
- diapirism
- Eastern Ghats
- Ghats
- granites
- igneous rocks
- India
- Indian Peninsula
- lithosphere
- magmas
- magmatic differentiation
- magmatism
- mantle
- Mesoarchean
- Neoarchean
- Paleoarchean
- Paleoproterozoic
- partial melting
- plate collision
- plate convergence
- plate tectonics
- plutonic rocks
- Precambrian
- Proterozoic
- Singhbhum Granite
- Southern Granulite Terrain
- tectonics
- tonalite-trondhjemite-granodiorite magmas
- upper Precambrian
- Singhbhum Craton
- Aravalli Craton