Geology and Geochemistry of the Middle Proterozoic Eastern Ghat Mobile Belt and Its Comparison with the Lower Crust of the Southern Peninsular Shield
Abstract
Two prominent rock suites constitute the lithology of the Eastern Ghat mobile belt: (1) the khondalite suite - the metapelites, and (2) the charnockite suite. Later intrusives include ultramafic sequences, anorthosites and granitic gneisses. The chief structural element in the rocks of the Eastern Ghats is a planar fabric (gneissosity), defined by the alignment of platy minerals like flattened quartz, garnet, sillimanite, graphite, etc. The parallelism between the foliation and the lithological layering is related to isoclinal folding. The major structural trend (axial plane foliation trend) observed in the belt is NE-SW. Five major tectonic events have been delineated in the belt. A boundary fault along the western margin of the Eastern Ghats, bordering the low grade terrain has been substantiated by recent gravity and the deep seismic sounding studies. Field evidence shows that the pyroxene granulites (basic granulites) post-date the khondalite suite, but are older than the charnockites as well as the granitic gneisses. Polyphase metamorphism, probably correlatable with different periods of deformation is recorded. The field relations in the Eastern Ghats point to the intense deformation of the terrain, apparently both before, during and after metamorphism.
- Publication:
-
Workshop on the Deep Continental Crust of South India
- Pub Date:
- 1988
- Bibcode:
- 1988dcc..work..151R
- Keywords:
-
- Earth Crust;
- Geochemistry;
- Gneiss;
- Granite;
- Lithology;
- Metamorphism (Geology);
- Petrology;
- Tectonics;
- Terrain;
- Alignment;
- Anorthosite;
- Boundaries;
- Deformation;
- Folding;
- Graphite;
- India;
- Mineralogy;
- Pyroxenes;
- Quartz;
- Trends;
- Geophysics