Some examples of deep structure of the Archean from geophysics
Abstract
The development of Archean crust remains as one of the significant problems in earth science, and a major unknown concerning Archean terrains is the nature of the deep crust. The character of crust beneath granulite terrains is especially fascinating because granulites are generally interpreted to represent a deep crustal section. Magnetic data from this area can be best modeled with a magnetized wedge of older Archean rocks (granulitic gneisses) underlying the younger Archean greenstone terrain. The dip of the boundary based on magnetic modeling is the same as the dip of the postulated thrust-fault reflection. Thus several lines of evidence indicate that the younger Archean greenstone belt terrain is thrust above the ancient Minnesota Valley gneiss terrain, presumably as the greenstone belt was accreted to the gneiss terrain, so that the dipping reflection represents a suture zone. Seismic data from underneath the granulite-facies Minnesota gneiss terrain shows abundant reflections between 3 and 6 s, or about 9 to 20 km. These are arcuate or dipping multicyclic events indicative of layering.
- Publication:
-
Early Crustal Genesis: The World's Oldest Rocks
- Pub Date:
- 1986
- Bibcode:
- 1986ecgw.work...98S
- Keywords:
-
- Earth Crust;
- Geochronology;
- Geophysics;
- Metamorphism (Geology);
- Seismic Waves;
- Stratigraphy;
- Geological Faults;
- Gneiss;
- Granite;
- Plates (Tectonics);
- Reflected Waves;
- Geophysics