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Structural controls on melt segregation and migration related to the formation of the diapiric Schwerin Fold in the contact aureole of the Bushveld Complex, South Africa

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 March 2009

Luke Longridge
Affiliation:
School of Geosciences, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, PVT Bag 3, Wits, 2050, South Africa Email: [email protected]
Roger L. Gibson
Affiliation:
School of Geosciences, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, PVT Bag 3, Wits, 2050, South Africa Email: [email protected]
Paul A. M. Nex
Affiliation:
School of Geosciences, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, PVT Bag 3, Wits, 2050, South Africa Email: [email protected] Umbono Group of Companies, Isle of Houghton, Johannesburg, South Africa

Abstract

Partial melting of metapelitic rocks beneath the mafic–ultramafic Rustenburg Layered Suite of the Bushveld Complex in the vicinity of the periclinal Schwerin Fold resulted in a structurally controlled distribution of granitic leucosomes in the upper metamorphic aureole. In the core of the pericline, subvertical structures facilitated the rise of buoyant leucosome through the aureole towards the contact with the Bushveld Complex, with leucosomes accumulating in en-echelon tension gashes. In a subhorizontal syn-metamorphic shear zone to the southeast of the pericline, leucosomes accumulated in subhorizontal dilational structural sites. The kinematics of this shear zone are consistent with slumping of material off the southeastern limb of the rising Schwerin pericline. The syndeformational timing of leucosome emplacement supports a syn-intrusive, density-driven origin for the Schwerin Fold. Modelling of the cooling of the Rustenburg Layered Suite and heating of the floor rocks using a multiple intrusion model indicates that temperatures above the solidus were maintained for >600,000 years up to 300 m from the contact, in agreement with rheological modelling of floor-rock diapirs that indicate growth rates on the order of 8 mm/year for the Schwerin Fold.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Royal Society of Edinburgh 2010

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