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ASEG Extended Abstracts ASEG Extended Abstracts Society
ASEG Extended Abstracts
RESEARCH ARTICLE

The integration of geophysics and geochemistry reveals the nature of the lithosphere beneath the Slave Craton (Canada)

Yvette Poudjom Djomani, Suzanne Y. O?Reilly, William L. Griffin, Lev M. Natapov, Norman J. Pearson and Buddy J. Doyle

ASEG Extended Abstracts 2004(1) 1 - 3
Published: 2004

Abstract

The Slave Craton in Canada, is a small Archaean fragment, bounded on the east by the Thelon magmatic arc (2.0-1.9 Ga) on the western edge of the Archaean Rae Province and on the west by the Great Bear magmatic arc of the Wopmay Orogen (1.88-1.84 Ga). The northern and northeastern part is overlapped by Late Proterozoic and Phanerozoic supracrustal rocks. On the south, the Slave Craton is separated by the Great Slave Lake Shear Zone from the Early Proterozoic Chinchaga and Buffalo Head terranes. We use robust geochemical methods based on mantle-derived xenoliths, heavy mineral concentrates from over 25 kimberlites, and representative diamond populations and their inclusions to construct sections that delineate the composition, structure and thermal state of the lithospheric mantle across the Slave Craton. This analysis reveals a distinct two-layered lithosphere beneath the craton: a shallow ultradepleted, olivine-rich layer and a deeper less depleted layer, interpreted as an Archaean plume head. We have mapped variations in the gravity/topography relationships across the Slave Province in terms of the effective elastic thickness (Te). The results show that the northern part of the craton is characterised by a relatively weak lithosphere (Te < 25 km), probably related to the intrusion of the Mackenzie Plume (ca 1270 Ma). The strongest lithosphere is found in the eastern part of the craton (Te > 56 km). A N-S zone of low Te along the middle of the craton may map the deep extension of the suture between the ancient continental block making up the western part of the craton, and the younger accreted terranes that make up the eastern part. The zone of low Te gradient coincides with an area of strongly conductive upper mantle, and with the Nd/Pb isotope lines which define a major crustal boundary at depth, and is a major locus of kimberlite intrusion.

https://doi.org/10.1071/ASEG2004ab033

© ASEG 2004

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