- Title
- Genetic relationships between migmatites and the Swartoup Pluton in the Swartoup Hills (central Namaqua Belt)
- Creator
- Schmeldt, Graeme Alvin
- ThesisAdvisor
- Büttner, Steffen
- ThesisAdvisor
- Prevec, Stephen Anthony
- Subject
- Migmatite South Africa Northern Cape
- Subject
- Intrusions (Geology) South Africa
- Subject
- Metamorphic rocks South Africa Northern Cape
- Subject
- Metamorphism (Geology) South Africa Northern Cape
- Subject
- Onseepkans (South Africa)
- Subject
- Namaqualand (South Africa)
- Subject
- Anatexis
- Subject
- Swartoup
- Subject
- Koenap
- Date
- 2021-10-29
- Type
- Master's theses
- Type
- text
- Identifier
- http://hdl.handle.net/10962/192162
- Identifier
- vital:45201
- Description
- The central Namaqua Metamorphic Complex can be characterised by long-standing high-temperature (up to granulite/amphibolite facies) conditions between _ 1300 and 1100Ma, inevitably resulting in widespread metamorphism and plutonism. Hosted within a NW–SE striking antiformal structure about 40 km east of Onseepkans, Northen Cape, South Africa, in the Swartoup Hills, lies the Swartoup Pluton. The Swartoup Pluton was sampled and described in hand specimen and thin section. The study area was photographed, with all data presented in this study. The various rock types are readily discerned in the field due to their characteristic weathering colours and overall fabrics. The Swartoup granodioritic body is hosted within metasediments of the Bysteek and Koenap Formations, of the Arribees Group. The package was later intruded by another later granitoid, the Polisiehoek Granite-gneiss. The Bysteek Formation, a wall rock to the S-type Swartoup Pluton, reacted at the contact with the igneous body resulting in localised feldspathic granites and granodiorites with prominent, often euhedral, garnet, pryoxene and titanite. The Swartoup Pluton is divided into two subgroups. The first is characterised by higher P2O5 contents, _ 0.3 – 0.4 wt.%, shown with a narrower constraint on its Rb contents, _ 80 – 160 ppm, than the second, with _ 0.14 – 0.4 wt.% P2O5 and 20 – 310 ppm Rb. Meanwhile the Polisiehoek Granite-gneiss shows _ 50 – 420 ppm Rb and _ 0.04 – 0:1 wt% P2O5. As a whole, the Swartoup Pluton is characterised by somewhat elevated CaO concentrations (_ 1.5 – 6.0 wt.%), relative to calculated averages of granites (1.8 wt.% CaO, Le Maitre, 1976) and granodiorites (3.9 wt.% CaO, Le Maitre, 1976). Whilst most of the Swartoup specimens were classified as granodiorites, some orthopyroxene-bearing monzodiorite and orthopyroxenebearing monzonite were locally found and sampled. However, much of the body appears to be granodioritic to granitic in composition. The Polisiehoek Granite-gneiss is characterised by its orange-brown weathering colour in the field, sheared texture, lower P2O5 and higher total alkali content than the Swartoup Pluton. The Polisiehoek Granite-gneiss is a highly fractionated S-type granite, as shown by plots of (a) (Na2O + K2O)/CaO and (b) FeOT/MgO versus Zr + Nb + Ce + Y (Whalen et al., 1987; Zhang et al., 2019) and also of (c) (Al2O3 + CaO)/(FeOT + Na2O + K2O) versus 100 × (MgO + FeOT + TiO2)/SiO2 (after Sylvester, 1989). Classification schemes identify the Polisiehoek Granite-gneiss as either a granite (TAS diagram, after Middlemost, 1994) or alkali granite (R1R2 diagram, after De la Roche et al., 1980).
- Description
- Thesis (MSc) -- Faculty of Science, Geology, 2021
- Format
- computer, online resource, application/pdf, 1 online resource (195 pages), pdf
- Publisher
- Rhodes University, Faculty of Science, Geology
- Language
- English
- Rights
- Schmeldt, Graeme Alvin
- Rights
- Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0)
- Rights
- Open Access
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View Details | SOURCE1 | SCHMELDT-MSC-TR21-307.pdf | 4 MB | Adobe Acrobat PDF | View Details |