4.7 Article

Detrital zircon age, oxygen and hafnium isotope systematics record rigid continents after 2.5 Ga

Journal

GONDWANA RESEARCH
Volume 57, Issue -, Pages 90-118

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.gr.2018.02.001

Keywords

Crustal reworking; detrital zircon; Hf isotopes; O isotopes; North Australian Craton

Funding

  1. Australian Research Council [DP0773029]
  2. Linkage Project [LP110100667]
  3. University of Western Australia
  4. Australian Research Council [LP110100667, DP0773029] Funding Source: Australian Research Council

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The Neoarchean-Paleoproterozoic boundary at 2.5 Ga is marked by fundamental changes in the composition of the mantle, crust and atmosphere-hydrosphere. These changes show that the evolution of Earth's deep interior and its exterior are linked, but the causes of the global transitions are cryptic. The isotopic signatures of detrital zircon enable the nature of felsic magma sources before and after 2.5 Ga to be compared, providing insight into the processes driving secular change. For this purpose, we present new oxygen and Hf isotope data from detrital zircon grains hosted by Paleoproterozoic metasedimentary rocks of the North Australian Craton, which record three magmatic events at 2.7 Ga, 2.5 Ga and 1.87 Ga. Scattered zircon epsilon(Hf) (+6 to -10) coupled with mantle-like delta O-18 at 2.7 Ga indicates both new crustal addition and the reworking of older materials. At 2.5 Ga, a wide range in zircon epsilon(Hf) (+7 to -12) and delta O-18 (5 to 7 parts per thousand) reflects reworking of infracrustal and (subordinate) supracrustal components of various crustal residence age. The dominance of subchondritic zircon epsilon(Hf) suggests that depleted mantle inputs were limited. The epsilon(Hf) array contracts markedly (+3 to -8) at 1.87 Ga and is coupled with isotopically heavy oxygen (delta O-18 from 7 to 9.5 parts per thousand), indicating a substantial contribution from clay-rich supracrustal sources. We attribute the contraction of the zircon cur array at ca. 1.87 Ga to the melting of a range of Neoarchean crustal components, where the disparate Hf isotope signatures of these were partially homogenised by sedimentary processes. The shift in felsic magma sources after 2.5 Ga, from dominantly infracrustal to supracrustal, implies a change in the mechanical behaviour of the lithosphere, from soft to rigid. This may have contributed to the transition in the composition of the continents at the Neoarchean-Paleoproterozoic boundary. (C) 2018 International Association for Gondwana Research. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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