Publication Details

AFRICAN RESEARCH NEXUS

SHINING A SPOTLIGHT ON AFRICAN RESEARCH

earth and planetary sciences

Chronological correlations between the Pilbara and Kaapvaal cratons

Precambrian Research, Volume 97, No. 3-4, Year 1999

The early geological development of the Pilbara and Kaapvaal cratons has many features in common. Attempts have been made to correlate geologically similar features of the two cratons, and it has been postulated that they originated as contiguous components of a single continent, 'Vaalbara', during this time. The early geological histories of the Pilbara and Kaapvaal cratons are here compared in detail and the evidence that they were initially contiguous is assessed. These comparisons indicate significant differences in the chronologies of magmatic events within the granite-greenstone crusts of the Pilbara and Kaapvaal cratons. In addition, igneous correlatives emplaced during ca 2985 and 2782 Ma magmatic events on the Kaapvaal Craton have not been identified on the Pilbara Craton, and a well-defined 2760 Ma magmatic event, manifest as widespread emplacement of granitic rocks into the Pilbara granite-greenstone basement and eruption of flood basalts of the lower part of the Fortescue Group, is absent from the Kaapvaal Craton. Furthermore, similarities in first- and second-order transgression-regression cycles within the sedimentary supracrustal sequences may be attributable to global sea-level fluctuations, and thus may be irrevelant to the question of former contiguity. However, similarities in some aspects of the geological development of the Pilbara and Kaapvaal cratons imply that there were periods, extending for between 60 and 200 Ma, of the Archaean era during which the style of crust formation, intensity of volcanism and subaerial erosion, and magnitude of sea-level fluctuations may have varied on a global scale. Such similarities include the overall duration of formation of the granite-greenstone crusts from ca 3650 to 3100 Ma, the onset of craton-wide erosion in the interval ca 3125 to 3000 Ma, the major episodes of flood basaltic volcanism between 2760 and 2680 Ma, the predominance of chemical (carbonate and banded iron-formation) sedimentation between ca 2630 and 2440 Ma and the transition to widespread clastic sedimentation within the interval 2440 to 2200 Ma.

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