2007
DOI: 10.1111/j.1525-1314.2007.00708.x
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Grenvillian‐aged orogenesis in the Palaeoproterozoic Gascoyne Complex, Western Australia: 1030–950 Ma reworking of the Proterozoic Capricorn Orogen

Abstract: In situ SHRIMP U-Pb geochronology of monazite and xenotime in pelitic schists from the central Gascoyne Complex, Western Australia, shows that greenschist to amphibolite facies metamorphism occurred between c. 1030 and c. 990 Ma. Monazite from an undeformed rare-element pegmatite from the same belt gives a 207 Pb/ 206 Pb age of c. 950 Ma, suggesting that peak metamorphism and deformation was followed by pegmatite intrusion and coeval granite magmatism. Metamorphism in the central Gascoyne Complex was previousl… Show more

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Cited by 74 publications
(44 citation statements)
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“…The Capricorn Orogen preserves several intraplate tectonic events, however. These include the high temperature, magmatism dominated, and possibly extensional Mangaroon Orogeny from 1680 to 1620 Ma (Sheppard et al, 2005); the prolonged Mutherbukin Tectonic Event from 1385 to 1200 Ma, characterised by shearing and metamorphism, but lacking magmatism (Johnson et al, 2011b), and the relatively minor and locally restricted Edmundian Orogeny from 1040 to 955 Ma (Sheppard et al, 2007). Between these orogenic events the Capricorn Orogen saw several basin forming events between 1620 and 1465 Ma (Edmund Basin) and ca.…”
Section: The West Australian Cratonmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…The Capricorn Orogen preserves several intraplate tectonic events, however. These include the high temperature, magmatism dominated, and possibly extensional Mangaroon Orogeny from 1680 to 1620 Ma (Sheppard et al, 2005); the prolonged Mutherbukin Tectonic Event from 1385 to 1200 Ma, characterised by shearing and metamorphism, but lacking magmatism (Johnson et al, 2011b), and the relatively minor and locally restricted Edmundian Orogeny from 1040 to 955 Ma (Sheppard et al, 2007). Between these orogenic events the Capricorn Orogen saw several basin forming events between 1620 and 1465 Ma (Edmund Basin) and ca.…”
Section: The West Australian Cratonmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…5) has a history of evolution for 800e1000 Ma that comprises repeated basin formation, magmatism and orogeny in the Wilson cycle of PaleoproterozoiceMesoproterozoic age (Tyler and Thorne, 1990). Four discrete Paleoproterozoic orogenic events at 2215e2145 Ma (Opthalmian Orogeny), 2005e1960 Ma (Glenburgh orogeny), 1830e1780 Ma (Capricorn Orogeny) and 1680e1620 Ma (Mangaroon orogeny) and a single Mesoproterozoic to Neoproterozoic Edmundian orogeny (1070e755 Ma) have been recorded from the Capricorn Orogen (Cawood and Tyler, 2004;Sheppard et al, 2004Sheppard et al, , 2007.…”
Section: The Capricorn Orogenic Belt Of Western Australia and Its Adjmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Subsequent episodes of tectonic reactivation resulted in deformation, metamorphism, and sedimentation, with little or no magmatism (Fig. 2), as exemplified by the Mutherbukin Tectonic Event (1320-1170 Ma; Korhonen et al, 2015), the Edmundian Orogeny (1030-955 Ma; Martin and Thorne, 2004;Sheppard et al, 2007), and the c. 570 Ma Mulka Tectonic Event. This protracted tectonomagmatic history has produced a stratified crustal profile (Fig.…”
Section: The Capricorn Orogenmentioning
confidence: 95%
“…Deep crustal seismic imaging shows that the batholith ranges in thickness from ∼1.8 km in the center of the Mutherbukin Zone to ∼11.5 km at its northern contact where it is truncated by the Ti Tree Shear Zone ( Fig. 1b; Johnson et al, 2013b), a long-lived crustal-scale structure with evidence for fault reactivation as recently as the Neoproterozoic (Sheppard et al, 2007). The batholith has a concave basal contact with the underlying basement, which suggests that it has been folded after emplacement.…”
Section: Reworking Event 3: the Mutherbukin Tectonic Eventmentioning
confidence: 97%