Personeelslijst
Jean-Paul Liégeois
Aardwetenschappen
Geodynamica en minerale rijkdommen
Geodynamica en minerale rijkdommen
Beschrijving
Fezaa, N., Liégeois, J.P., Abdallah, N., Cherfouh, E.H., De Waele, B., Bruguier, O. & Ouabadi, O. 2010. ‘Late Ediacaran geological evolution (575–555 Ma) of the Djanet Terrane, Eastern Hoggar, Algeria, evidence for a Murzukian intracontinental episode’. Precambrian Research 299–327: 299–327. Amsterdam : Elsevier. DOI: 10.1016/j.precamres.2010.05.011. I.F. 3.736.
Article in a scientific Journal / Article in a Journal
The Eastern Hoggar is by far the least well known part of the Tuareg Shield. It is composed, from west
to east, of the Aouzegueur, Edembo and Djanet Terranes. The Djanet Terrane is the easternmost Hoggar
terrane and comprises a greenschist-facies clastic sedimentary sequence, the Djanet Group, intruded by
granitoids. Laser ablation (LA-) ICP-MS U–Pb zircon ages of detrital zircons from these sediments yield a
large range of ages similar to ages known in Central and Western Hoggar; the youngest is 590±10Ma
(2), which is the maximum age of deposition of the Djanet Group. The Djanet Group is intruded by
the Djanet Batholith (571±16 Ma), by high-level subcircular plutons such as the Tin Bedjane Pluton
(568±5 Ma) and finally by the felsic Tin Amali Dyke Swarm (558±5 Ma), all ages being SHRIMP U–Pb
zircon. The deposition and metamorphism of the Djanet Group thus occurred between 590Ma (the age of
the youngest detrital zircons analyzed in the Djanet Group) and c. 570Ma(the age of intrusive granitoids).
Nd TDM two-stage model ages (1.30–2.03 Ga), initial 87Sr/86Sr ratios (0.7035–0.7095) and εNd (−3 to −11)
of the three intrusive suites, all being high-K calc-alkaline in composition, indicate mainly an old, Rbdepleted
continental source. Migmatization in the adjacent Edembo Terrane is dated at 568±4Ma (U–Pb
zircon SHRIMP age), contemporaneous with the intrusion of the Djanet plutons. Rocks and events in the
Edembo and Djanet Terranes are all intracontinental. We propose that the Djanet Terrane lies on the
boundary of a craton located to the north-east, that we defined here as the Murzuq craton. The existence
of the Murzuq craton is supported by sedimentary and geophysical data.Wesuggest that the deformation
of Eastern Hoggar occurred 575–555 Ma, due to the indentation of the Murzuq craton and has no link
with the older convergence with the West African craton as was the case for the central and western parts
of the Tuareg Shield. This determines a late Ediacaran intracontinental Murzukian event that probably
also occurred to the east in the Tibesti area.