Sm–Nd isotopic investigation of Neoproterozoic and
Transcrição
Sm–Nd isotopic investigation of Neoproterozoic and
Lithos 82 (2005) 345 – 377 www.elsevier.com/locate/lithos Sm–Nd isotopic investigation of Neoproterozoic and Cretaceous igneous rocks from southern Brazil: A study of magmatic processes Maria do Carmo P. Gastala,T, Jean Michel Lafonb, Léo Afraneo Hartmannc, Edinei Koesterd a Centro de Estudos em Petrologia e Geoquı́mica, Instituto de Geociências, UFRGS, P.O. Box 15 022, Porto Alegre, RS 91501-970, Brazil b Pará-Iso, Centro de Geociências, UFPA, P.O. Box 1611, Belém, PA 66 075-110, Brazil c Centro de Estudos em Petrologia e Geoquı́mica, Instituto de Geociências, UFRGS, P.O. Box 15 001, Porto Alegre, RS 91501-970, Brazil d Laboratório de Geologia Isotópica, Instituto de Geociências, UFRGS, P.O. Box 15 001, Porto Alegre, RS 91501-970, Brazil Received 5 March 2004; accepted 4 January 2005 Available online 26 February 2005 Abstract Nd-evolutionary paths for diversified igneous suites from southern Brazil are here re-evaluated using published results. We interpret the e Nd paths considering the secondary fractionation of 147Sm/144Nd due to major petrogenetic processes. The inclusion of Nd isotopes and geochemical data for Precambrian and Mesozoic basic rocks allow improving the discussion on the subcontinental lithosphere beneath southern Brazil. Late Neoproterozoic rocks, mostly granitoids, are exposed in two regions of the southern Brazilian shield, an eastern collisional belt and a western foreland. The latter included two geotectonic domains amalgamated at this time, the São Gabriel Arc (900–700 Ma), and the Taquarembó cratonic block. Magma genesis mainly involved mixture of crustal and incompatible-element-enriched mantle components, both with a long residence time. Continental segments are the Neoarchaean–Paleoproterozoic lower crust (ca. 2.55 Ga) in the western foreland, and Paleoproterozoic–Neoproterozoic recycled crust (2.1–0.8 Ga) in the collisional belt. Granitoids with a single crustal derivation are limited in the southern Brazilian Shield. Mixing processes are well-registered in the western foreland, where the re-enriched old mantle was probably mixed with a 900–700 Ma-old subducted lithosphere and a 2.55 Ga-old lower crust. The contribution of the latter increased from the early 605–580 Ma to the later 575–550 Ma Neoproterozoic events, which may be due either to crustal thickening or to delamination of the lithosphere. Magma sources were diversified in the 660–630 Ma collisional belt. Initially, they involved the mixing between two components with similar Nd isotopic ratios, a 2.1–0.8 Ga-old recycled crust and a subduction-processed old mantle. Regional heating and abundant production of granitic melts, with diversified contribution of enriched mantle components, mark the end of the collisional period, at 630–580 Ma. We can also attribute this to the delamination of the lithosphere, so that the same geodynamic process may explain the magmatism in the whole shield at the end of the Dom Feliciano Orogeny. Mesozoic rocks include flood basalts from the Cretaceous Paraná Province and sub-coeval alkalic suites. Multiple processes of metasomatism affected the lithospheric mantle, resulting in some complexity but they mainly register two enriched-mantle components, both generated during Neoarchaean–Paleoproterozoic events. One end- T Corresponding author. Tel.: +55 51 3316 6360; fax: +55 51 3316 7302. E-mail address: [email protected] (M.C.P. Gastal). 0024-4937/$ - see front matter D 2005 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved. doi:10.1016/j.lithos.2004.09.025 346 M.C.P. Gastal et al. / Lithos 82 (2005) 345–377 member has a more pronounced subduction signature. The other one probably resulted from the re-enrichment of the first component at the end of the Camboriú collisional orogeny (~2.0 Ga). D 2005 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved. Keywords: Nd isotopes; Southern Brazilian Shield; Magma production events; Subcontinental lithosphere; Mantle metasomatism 1. Introduction Coherent Nd evolution patterns for igneous and metamorphic rocks from the same region provide an opportunity to investigate differences between the magma production events, and to define crustal provinces (Bennett and DePaolo, 1987). Neoproterozoic igneous associations from the southern Brazilian Shield, mostly granitoids, were formed during two tectono-thermal events of the Brasiliano Cycle: the São Gabriel accretionary orogeny (900–700 Ma) in the west, and the Dom Feliciano collisional orogeny (660–550 Ma) in the east. Nd-evolutionary patterns for these associations show two distinct lithospheric domains in the shield during the late Neoproterozoic (660–550 Ma), as pointed out by Gastal et al. (in press). They correspond to the eastern Dom Feliciano collisional belt and the western Neoproterozoic foreland, composed at this time by the cratonic block juxtaposed with the early Neoproterozoic São Gabriel arc. The magma genesis for the late Neoproterozoic igneous suites involved two old crust segments (Neoarchaean–Paleoproterozoic and Proterozoic) and distinct components of the lithospheric mantle. The results of the previous review, despite some uncertainties, show that this type of approach is valuable for the recognition of the regional characteristics of mantle and crustal sources. This has stimulated further investigations of Nd isotopes to place better constraints on the source materials, and on the timing of the chemical modifications. The interpretation of e Nd-evolutionary paths has been usually based on the assumption that the studied rocks remain closed with respect to the Sm–Nd isotopic system during crustal processes (Bennett and DePaolo, 1987; Cordani et al., 2000). However, recent studies have shown that significant fractionation of the Sm/Nd ratio may occur during crustal processes such as deformation and metamorphism (Chavagnac et al., 1999), anatexis (Ayres and Harris, 1997; Davies and Tommasini, 2000), and even frac- tional crystallization of granitic melts (Pimentel and Charnley, 1991). Variations in both composition and residence times of lithospheric mantle components (enriched mantle—EM types) make it difficult to interpret Nd model ages directly as crust-formation ages. Further complexities may also be due to different mixtures of distinct mantle components, and between them and other crustal reservoirs (Arndt and Goldstein, 1987). To avoid these limitations, we address two main issues: fractionation of 147Sm/144Nd during magma genesis, and characterization of lithospheric mantle components in the region. We examine the effects on secondary fractionation of 147Sm/144Nd of major processes affecting the sources during the generation of magmas. Such processes include partial melting, binary mixing of source materials (crust and mantle), and metasomatism of the subcontinental lithosphere. Mantle and crust end-members are considered on a regional basis. We discuss the mantle components on a comparative study of Proterozoic and Mesozoic, basic to intermediate igneous rocks. Cretaceous (130– 100 Ma) associations include the extensive continental flood basalts from Paraná Magmatic Province and sub-coeval alkalic rocks, which have mainly a lithospheric signature (Garland et al., 1996; Hawkesworth et al., 1988, 1999; Marques et al., 1999). These basalts and the late Neoproterozoic (660–550 Ma) igneous rocks represent the two major magma-producing events in the region, related respectively to the break up and amalgamation of the western Gondwana Supercontinent. Therefore, we consider that they sampled main regional components of the lithosphere. We also use isotope and geochemical data of selected Proterozoic dykes from other regions next to southern Brazil. Some Proterozoic tholeiites share many compositional features with Cretaceous basalts in the region, as discussed by Iacumin et al. (2003). This led these authors to conclude that the regional heterogeneities in mantle sources were established since late Archaean times, which substantiates the present study. M.C.P. Gastal et al. / Lithos 82 (2005) 345–377 In summary, the main goal of the paper is to improve the understanding of the regional lithospheric sources of the late Neoproterozoic igneous associations. The inclusion of diversified rocks, with distinct ages in e Nd-evolutionary paths, seems a challenging but promising approach for studying the geodynamics of the lithosphere beneath southern Brazil. 2. Geological and geochemical overview 2.1. Proterozoic The southernmost portion of the Brazilian Shield is continuously exposed from southern Brazil into Uruguay (Fig. 1A; Hartmann et al., 2002). We hereafter designate this region as southern Brazilian and Uruguayan shields, which include the following geotectonic domains: (a) the Rio de la Plata Craton mostly in Uruguay, composed of (Archaean)–Paleoproterozoic terranes unaffected by Neoproterozoic collisional orogeny (660–550 Ma); (b) the São Gabriel magmatic arc limited to the northwestern portion of the southern Brazilian shield and formed during the Neoproterozoic accretionary orogeny (900–700 Ma); and (c) the Dom Feliciano Belt in the east of shield areas including several older crustal fragments (Paleoproterozoic and early Neoproterozoic), which was reworked during the Neoproterozoic collisional orogeny (660–550 Ma). Two major magnetic discontinuities in the southern Brazilian Shield have N–S and NNE–SSW trends, and they divide the shield into three segments that fit roughly the main geotectonic domains (Fig. 2A; Costa, 1997). The Porto Alegre discontinuity separates the collisional belt into two distinct segments (Fig. 2A–C; Fernandes et al., 1995). The eastern portion includes mainly medium- to highK, calc-alkaline granitoids formed at 820–580 Ma, and corresponds partly to the Pelotas batholith (Fig. 2C). The western portion of the collisional belt consists of tectonically reworked Paleoproterozoic basement rocks, including the Porongos schist belt. This portion extends westwards making up the central domain of the shield, which was largely covered with sediments of the Camaquã Basin at 605–450 Ma (Fig 2A; Paim et al., 2000). Magmatic events and geological units, for which we compiled Nd isotope data, are summarized in Table 1. Geochemical and isotope 347 data for selected samples of the basic-to-intermediate Proterozoic rocks are listed in Table 2. 2.1.1. Neoarchaean–Paleoproterozoic domains Geological units from the Rio de la Plata Craton were mainly formed during the Trans-Amazonian Cycle that includes the accretionary Encantadas (2.25–2.10 Ga) and the collisional Camboriú (2.1– 2.0 Ga) orogenies (Hartmann, 2002). The Rio de la Plata Craton comprises the Piedra Alta and Nico Pérez terranes in Uruguay, and the Taquarembó Block in southern Brazil (Fig. 1A). The southernmost extension of the craton crops out in Argentina– Tandilia Belt (Fig. 1B), whereas its northernmost exposure is the basement of the Asunción–Sapucai graben in central Paraguay (ASU—Fig. 1B; Fulfaro, 1996). Some Archaean remnants were metamorphosed under granulite facies conditions during the Trans-Amazonian orogenies. For example, the 2.55 Ga Santa Maria Chico Granulite Complex, in the Taquarembó Block, is a tholeiitic island arc suite metamorphosed at 2.03–2.02 Ga under high-grade and high-P conditions (Table 1 and Fig. 2B; Hartmann, 1998). Paleoproterozoic associations include low- to highK calc-alkaline granite-gneisses, and metavolcanosedimentary rocks. These associations are well preserved in the Piedra Alta Terrane and Tandilia Belt (Fig. 1A,B), and similar calc-alkaline associations are exposed as basement to the Dom Feliciano Belt (Fig. 2C). The 2.23–2.06 Ga Buenos Aires Complex in the Tandilia Belt includes three magmatic suites (Cingolani and Dalla Salda, 2000; Hartmann et al., 2002): low- and high-K calc alkaline, and post-collisional peraluminous (Table 1). All types were overprinted at 0.98–0.79 Ga by low-grade thermal events (Teixeira et al., 2002). In the Dom Feliciano Belt, the 2.08 Ga Arroio dos Ratos Complex, composed of medium- to high-K calc-alkaline rocks, represents the Paleoproterozoic igneous associations (Table 1; Leite et al., 2000). Older and more primitive calc-alkaline arc associations also occur in this belt, as exemplified by the 2.26–2.08 Ga Encantadas Complex (C.C. Porcher, unpublished data; not shown in Table 1 or Fig. 2C). The Arroio dos Ratos Complex, in the Pelotas Batholith, was metamorphosed at ca. 0.63 Ga under high-grade and low-P conditions (Leite et al., 2000). Unmetamorphosed, intermediate to acid, 2.02 Ga 348 M.C.P. Gastal et al. / Lithos 82 (2005) 345–377 calc-alkaline dykes in the Tandilia Belt have an E–W trend (TDD—Fig. 1A; Teixeira et al., 2002), and represent a post-collisional event to the 2.1–2.0 Gaold Camboriú Orogeny (Table 1). Intracratonic magmatic activity occurred in Uruguay and Argentina at the Paleoproterozoic–Mesoproterozoic transition (1.8–1.6 Ga). Dyke swarms mostly composed of tholeiitic basalts and basaltic M.C.P. Gastal et al. / Lithos 82 (2005) 345–377 andesites represent this event. The Uruguayan dykes swarm, in the Piedra Alta Terrane, has an ENE–WSW trend (UDS—Fig. 1A). For these dykes, the ages vary from 1.79 to 1.73 Ga (Teixeira et al., 1999; Halls et al., 2001), whereas in the Tandilia Belt younger 1.59 Ga-old dykes with an NE–SW trend occur (TDD— Fig. 1A; Teixeira et al., 2002). The latter include lowand high-Ti tholeiites (Iacumin et al., 2001), while UDS-basalts are mostly low-Ti tholeiites (Bossi et al., 1993). UDS-tholeiites show geochemistry similar to the 2.02 Ga calc-alkaline andesites from Tandil. Both have evolved compositions, are CIPW quartz-normative, have extremely low TiO2 (b1 wt.%) and low high field strength elements-HFSE (Zr, Nb) and Y contents. Incompatible-element ratios as Zr/Y, Y/Nb and Zr/Nb are therefore in the same range of values for the two sets of dykes (Table 2). Low Ti/Y and Ti/Zr ratios, and high (La/Nb)N in these dykes suggest subductionmodified mantle sources (Fig. 3B–D). Mesoproterozoic Tandil tholeiites are CIPW hyperstene-olivine normative and, contrarily, they were derived from an enriched mantle less affected by previous subduction events (Iacumin et al., 2001). Both the dominant lowTi, and the minor high-Ti Tandil tholeiites show low (La/Nb)N ratios (V2, Fig. 3C). Low-Ti basalts, however, have depleted compositions characterized by high Ti/Zr and very low (La/Yb)N and (La/Nb)N ratios, but high Ba/La ratios (Fig. 3B–D). 2.1.2. Neoproterozoic belts The two major periods of tectono-magmatic activity of the Brasiliano Cycle generated, respectively, the northwestern São Gabriel Arc (900–700 Ma) and the Dom Feliciano Belt (660–550 Ma) in the east of the exposed southern Brazilian Shield (Fig. 1A; Babinski et al., 1996; da Silva et al., 1999). The late Neoproterozoic event was due to a northeastern migration of the belt along NE–SW mega- 349 shear zones, driven by one or several collisional events located east or north of the region (Fernandes et al., 1995; Leite et al., 2000; Bitencourt and Nardi, 2000). The western portion of the shield at this time acted as a foreland, including two amalgamated geotectonic domains: the São Gabriel Arc and the Taquarembó Block (Chemale, 2000). Such a context characterizes a post-collisional setting for most of the granitic associations in the two domains of the shield formed at 610–550 Ma, at the end of the Dom Feliciano Orogeny. In the west, late Neoproterozoic magmatic events were contemporaneous with the beginning of deposition in the Camaquã foreland basin (Fig. 1A). The São Gabriel magmatic arc includes metavolcano-sedimentary sequences—the Vacacaı́ Group, intruded by low-K calc-alkaline metagranitoids, and the Cambaı́ Complex (Table 1). The studied units are from two regions, south and north (Fig. 2B). In the first one, the Cambaı́ Complex and the Cerro Mantiqueiras Ophiolite were formed mostly at 750– 730 Ma, and all units were metamorphosed in the middle to upper amphibolite facies conditions at 730– 700 Ma (Leite et al., 1998). The latter is a segment of the subarc oceanic crust including harzburgites interpreted as a refractory mantle component, and amphibolites that are island arc basalts (IAB) and basaltic andesites (Leite, 1997). In northern region, the Vacacaı́ sequences have similar crystallization ages of ca. 760 Ma, but the Cambaı́ metagranitoids have a younger U–Pb age of 704F13 Ma (Table 1; Babinski et al., 1996; Remus et al., 1999, 2000a). Metavolcano-sedimentary sequences occur juxtaposed with mafic–ultramafic bodies, and these units were metamorphosed at 700 Ma under low-grade conditions. In Uruguay, Treinta Y Tres basaltic dykes probably represent the post-tectonic magmatic events of the São Gabriel Orogeny. These dykes have an Fig. 1. Geological maps of Precambrian and Cretaceous rocks in the southern Brazil. A—Geotectonic units from southern Brazilian and Uruguayan shields, modified from Hartmann et al. (2000) and Santos et al. (2003). B—Paraná Magmatic Province and sub-coeval alkalic rocks, showing the distribution of regional units and chemical types of tholeiites (Peate et al., 1992; Kirstein et al., 2000; Morbidelli et al., 1995; Comin-Chiaramonti et al., 1997). Acid volcanics and sedimentary units above basalts are not shown; heavy dot-dashed line for low-Ti Esmeralda tholeiites; numbers in (B) for T DM(Nd) model ages (Ga) of some Cretaceous units and Proterozoic dykes. Cretaceous alkalic rocks: ASU—Asunción-Sapucaı́ Graben (potassic and sodic types), Eastern Paraguay Alkalic Province (Comin-Chiaramonti et al., 1997), and PCA— Passo da Capela Province (Viero, unpublished data). Proterozoic dykes: TTD—Neoproterozoic (ca. 750 Ma) transitional to alkalic, Treinta Y Tres basalts in Uruguay (Mazzucchelli et al., 1995; Girardi et al., 1996); TDD—Mesoproterozoic (1.59 Ga) tholeiites and Paleoproterozoic (2.02 Ga) calc-alkaline andesites from Tandil, Argentina (Iacumin et al., 2001); and UDS—Paleoproterozoic (1.7–1.8 Ga) Uruguayan dyke swarm (Bossi et al., 1993). In (A) and (B), the southern Brazilian shield detailed in Fig. 2 is highlighted; dashed lines for international limits. 350 M.C.P. Gastal et al. / Lithos 82 (2005) 345–377 Table 1 Sketch of magmatic events and geological units for the main geotectonic domains in southern Brazilian, Uruguayan and Argentinian shields Events Geological and chemical features A. Camaquã Basin–Neoproterozoic to Eopaleozoic Ordovician intraplate Restricted tholeiitic volcanic volcanism (490– 450 Ma) activity. Neoproterozoic post-collisional associations—Dom Feliciano Orogeny (605–550 Ma) (1) Late magmatic episode (575–550 Ma) Young and large granitic Post-tectonic, alkaline bodies (570–550 Ma) metaluminous granites. Syn-tectonic, high-K calc-alkaline granites. Post-tectonic volcano-plutonic association (575–570 Ma) Alkaline signature, ranging from metaluminous to weakly peralkaline compositions. (2) Early magmatic episode (605–580 Ma) Post-tectonic volcano-plutonic association with shoshonitic signature, and subordinate alkaline granites. B. Dom Feliciano Belt—Pelotas Batholith—Neoproterozoic Neoproterozoic post-collisional associations—Dom Feliciano Orogeny (660–580 Ma) (1) Post-tectonic granitoids Highly evolved calc-alkaline (615–580 Ma) granites. Alkaline and metaluminous granitoids. (2) Late- to post-tectonic granites (620–600 Ma) High-K calc-alkaline granites. (3) Syn-transcurrent granitoids Peraluminous, two-mica (660–610 Ma) granite. High-K calc-alkaline granites. e Nd(t) Geological units/lithologies Age (Ma) Rodeio Velho Formation—basalts and basaltic andesites. 470F19 (2r)1 14.0 to 9.619 São Sepé granitic complex— monzogranites and syenogranites. Jaguari granite—monzogranites and syenogranites. Caçapava do Sul granitic complex—granodiorites, monzogranites and leucogranites. Leões Ring Complex—diorites, qz. monzodiorites, and qz. syenites. Acampamento Velho Formation— trachytes, rhyolites and volcanoclastics rocks. Santo Antônio granitic massif— monzonites to monzogranites. Lavras do Sul Intrusive Complex— monzodiorites, monzonites, monzogranites and alkaline syenogranites; minettes and olivine minettes as dykes. Lavras do Sul Intrusive Complex— perthite granites. Hilário Formation—trachyandesites, spessartites and volcanoclastics rocks. 558F8 (2r)2 567F4 (2r)3 15.3 to 11.719 12.619 561F6 (2r)4 –562F8 (2r)5 20.2 to 10.313 572F3 (2r)6 13.9 to 11.46 12.6 to 12.519 583F2 (2r)6 9.019 599F7 (2r)3 –599.5F1.4 (2r)3–7 4.3 to 0.26,13,20 585F4 (2r)3–5–7 3.213 Capão do Leão granites—monzogranites and syenogranites. Encruzilhada do Sul Intrusive Suite: Monzonites, qz. monzonites, and qz. syenites. Monzogranites and syenogranites. Arroio Moinho granite—monzogranites and syenogranites. Pinheiro Machado Suite (young-PMS)— syeno and monzogranites produced by remelting of old units during a late tectono-thermal event. Cordilheira-type metagranites— monzogranites and leucogranites. Quitéria metagranite—granodiorites. 9.0 to 2.319 583F3 (2r)8 3.79 611F3 (2r)8 10.89 594F5 (2r)9 595F1 (2r)9 15.69 4.69 613F6 (2r)9 6.6 to 5.79 638F6 (2r) to 617F8 (2r)10 658F4 (2r)10 7.4 to 5.421 7.5 to 7.321 M.C.P. Gastal et al. / Lithos 82 (2005) 345–377 351 Table 1 (continued) e Nd(t) Events Geological and chemical features Geological units/lithologies Age (Ma) Neoproterozoic flat-lying association—São Gabriel Orogeny (900–700 Ma) Medium- to high-K calc-alkaline granitoids. Pinheiro Machado Suite (old-PMS)— tonalites and granodiorites, with abundant qz. diorites enclaves, hybrid rocks and xenoliths of the basement. Piratini Complex—tonalitic gneisses as xenoliths. 806F17 (2r)11 8.0 to 5.39 781F5 (2r)11 8.611 C. São Gabriel Arc—Neoproterozoic Neoproterozoic island arc Low-grade associations—São Gabriel volcano-sedimentary Orogeny (900–700 Ma) sequences and mafic–ultramafic intrusions. Vacacaı́ Group—Campestre Formation: 753F2 (2r)12 low-K calc-alkaline, intermediate-to-acid metavolcanics. Mata Grande Gabbro—stratified mafic–ultramafic intrusive body including peridotites, troctolites, leucogabbros and anorthosites. Low-K calc-alkaline granitoids Cambaı́ Complex—metadiorites, North: 704F13 and mafic–ultramafic metatonalites and metatrondhjemites. (2r)13 sequences, metamorphosed in South: 879F14 amphibolite facies conditions. (2r) to 735F10 (2r)5 Cerro Mantiqueiras Ophiolite— 733F10 (2r)5 serpentinized harzburgites, amphibolites and Mg-rich schists. D. Reworked cratonic segments—Pelotas Batholith—Paleoproterozoic Paleoproterozoic flat-lying Medium- to high-K Arroio dos Ratos Complex— association—Camboriú calc-alkaline granite-gneisses. metagranodiorites and metatonalites. Orogeny (2.1–2.0 Ga) E. Rio de la Plata Craton—Archaean to Paleoproterozoic Mesoproterozoic intraplate Restricted tholeiitic volcanic activity. event, Tandilia Belt (1.59 Ga) Paleoproterozoic intraplate Restricted tholeiitic volcanic event, Piedra Alta Terrane activity. (1.79–1.73 Ga) Paleoproterozoic post-tectonic Restricted calc-alkaline event, Tandilia Belt— volcanic activity. Camboriú Orogeny (2.1–2.0 Ga) Paleoproterozoic flat-lying Low- to high-K calc-alkaline, association, Tandilia Belt— and peraluminous Camboriú (2.1–2.0 Ga) and granite-gneisses. Encantadas (2.25–2.12 Ga) orogenies Neoarchaean island arc Granitoids, mafic–ultramafic association, Taquarembó and sedimentary rocks Block (ca. 2.70–2.55 Ga) metamorphosed in granulitic facies conditions at the Camboriú Orogeny (ca. 2.03 Ga). +7.813 +5.213 +5.2 to +2.813 +6.3 to +5.822 +6.2 to +1.222 2078F13 (2r)11 +6.611 1588F11 (2r)14 7.2 to +4.725T Uruguayan dyke swarm—basaltic andesites 1727F10 (1r)15 and andesites. and 1790F5 (2r)16 Tandil dykes (E–W)—basaltic andesites, 2020F24 (2r)14 andesites and rhyolites. 5.6 to 1.215T Buenos Aires Complex—metagranites, metatonalites, metatrondhjemites, migmatites and amphibolites, and minor schists, marbles and metavolcanics. 4.3 to 0.117 Tandil and Azul dykes (NW–SE)— basalts and basaltic andesites. 2234F15 (2r) to 2065F9 (2r)17 Santa Maria Chico Granulitic Complex— ca. 255018 depleted-LILE bimodal basic–acid association, with metatonalites, metatrondhjemites, metabasalts, piroxenites and metasedimentary rocks. 3.6 to 2.725T +3.3 to +1.123–24 352 M.C.P. Gastal et al. / Lithos 82 (2005) 345–377 estimated age of 750–700 Ma and crosscut the old granitoids from the Dom Feliciano Belt with a N–S trend (TTD—Fig. 2B; Mazzucchelli et al., 1995; Girardi et al., 1996). They are tholeiites and transitional basalts with low (La/Nb)N and high Ti/Y ratios, plotting close to the Mesoproterozoic high-Ti basalts from Tandil in Fig. 3A–D. The Pelotas Batholith comprises the 806–613 Ma Pinheiro Machado Suite (da Silva et al., 1999), and several younger 660–580 Ma granite suites (Fig. 2C). The Pinheiro Machado Suite is a high-K calc-alkaline association with a flat-lying structure, and abundant mafic enclaves and xenoliths (Table 1). Two age groups of granitoids compose the Pinheiro Machado Suite (PMS), interpreted as injection migmatites by da Silva et al. (1999). According to these authors, the 613 Ma-old syenogranites and monzogranites correspond to anatectic melts (young-PMS), while the less evolved 806 Ma facies comprises the mesosomes (old-PMS). The younger and more abundant granitoids can be grouped into three petrotectonic associations (Philipp et al., 2002; Koester et al., 2001): (1) syn- to late-transcurrent, high-K calc-alkaline and peraluminous, (2) late- to post-tectonic, high-K calcalkaline, and (3) post-tectonic, highly evolved calcalkaline and alkaline (Table 1). Syn-transcurrent suites related to the Dorsal de Canguçu Shear Zone comprise high-K calc-alkaline granodiorites (658F4 Ma), and two-mica leucogranites (638 to 617 Ma; Frantz et al., 2003). The emplacement of the late- and post-tectonic granite suites occurred in a shorter time (615–580 Ma), with a marked peak at ca. 600 Ma (Babinski et al., 1997; Koester et al., 2001; Philipp et al., 2002). Magmatic events in the Camaquã foreland basin have diversified geochemical affinity (Table 1; Fig. 2B). Voluminous intermediate-to-acid, shoshonitic, alkaline and high-K calc-alkaline magmatism characterizes its initial stages at 605–550 Ma. At the end, the deposition of sediments was intercalated with the localized 470 Ma–old tholeiitic volcanism (Table 1). Two major magmatic events have been identified, at 605–580 Ma and at 575–550 Ma, in this basin (Gastal and Lafon, 1998, 2001). The first one includes the shoshonitic, post-tectonic volcano-plutonic association and subordinate alkaline granites. Volcanic rocks, mostly trachyandesites, are best exposed nearby the Lavras do Sul Intrusive Complex, which includes a diversified group of ca. 599 Ma granitoids (Gastal et al., submitted for publication). Minettes and spessartites occur as dykes or domes associated with these intrusive and volcanic rocks. The late magmatic event includes two groups of rocks (Gastal and Lafon, 2001): (a) the post-tectonic, alkaline silica oversaturated volcanic suite, and minor subvolcanic bodies formed at 573–572 Ma, and (b) large granitic bodies formed at 570–550 Ma, including post-tectonic alkaline metaluminous and syn-tectonic high-K calcalkaline types. The two age groups of Neoproterozoic basic-tointermediate rocks from the foreland basin have evolved compositions, plotting in the field of silicasaturated alkalic suites (Fig. 3A). All have low Ti/Zr and high Zr/Nb ratios (Fig. 3B; Table 2). The high Ba/La and Ba/Nb ratios reflecting elevated concentrations of Ba (900 to 1900 ppm) show that these rocks are distinct from the other Proterozoic basic rocks (Fig. 3C; Table 2). They have high (La/Yb)N ratio implying garnet retention in the source, and show higher and varied (La/Nb)N, up to 7 (mostly z3; Fig. 3C,D). The least evolved minette (olminette, mg 69%), however, show the lowest (La/ Nb)N ratio close to those of most of the Neoproterozoic Trienta Y Tres transitional dykes (Table 2). The minette (mg 58%) shows higher (La/Nb)N and more extreme contents of incompatible elements (LREE, P2O5, Ba, Sr, Ta, Nb). This suggests the presence of distinct source materials since the fractional crystallization does not have any signifi- Notes to Table 1: References: 1—U–Pb, Hartmann et al. (1998); 2—U–Pb, Remus et al. (1999); 3—207Pb/206Pb, Gastal et al. (submitted for publication); 4—U– Pb, Remus et al. (2000a); 5—U–Pb, Leite et al. (1998); 6—207Pb/206Pb, Sm–Nd, Gastal and Lafon (2001); 7—U–Pb, Remus et al. (2000b); 8—207Pb/206Pb, Philipp et al. (2002); 9—U–Pb, Sm–Nd, Babinski et al. (1997); 10—U–Pb, Frantz et al. (2003); 11—U–Pb, Sm–Nd, da Silva et al. (1999); 12—U–Pb, Machado et al. (1990); 13—U–Pb, Sm–Nd, Babinski et al. (1996); 14—Ar–Ar and U–Pb, Teixeira et al. (2002); 15— Ar–Ar, Sm–Nd, Teixeira et al. (1999); 16—U–Pb, Halls et al. (2001); 17—U–Pb, Hartmann et al. (2002); 18—U–Pb, Hartmann et al. (1999); 19—Sm–Nd, Chemale et al. (unpublished data); 20—Sm–Nd, Gastal et al. (2003); 21—Sm–Nd, Frantz et al. (1999); 22—Sm–Nd, Leite (1997); 23—Sm–Nd, Hartmann (1987); 24—Sm–Nd, Mantovani et al. (1987); 25—Sm–Nd, Iacumin et al. (2001). T—igneous suites for which Sm–Nd isotopes are detailed in Table 2. e Nd(t) For CHUR (Chondritic Uniform Reservoir) values from Goldstein et al. (1984 in Rollinson, 1993). M.C.P. Gastal et al. / Lithos 82 (2005) 345–377 353 Fig. 2. Geological maps of the southernmost Brazilian shield (A) that is separated into two major domains: the western Neoproterozoic foreland (B) and the Dom Feliciano collisional belt (C). A—Geotectonic units for the shield as in Fig. 1A. Main fault zones and major magnetic discontinuities are also shown (I—Porto Alegre and II—Caçapava magnetic discontinuities, from Fernandes et al., 1995; Porcher and Lopes, 2000). Minor occurrences of Cretaceous rocks: Passo da Capela Province (PCA) and dykes and sills (Rondina–Palmas subvolcanics—Viero, 1998). DCSZ—Dorsal de Canguçu shear zone. B—Western Neoproterozoic foreland, modified from Gastal and Lafon (1998): 1—São Sepé Granite Complex; 2—Cambaı́ Complex—northern region and Vacacaı́ Group (Mata Grande Gabbro); 3—Caçapava do Sul Granite Complex; 4—Santo Antônio Granite Massif; 5—Acampamento Velho Formation (rhyolites), Taquarembó Plateau; 6—Leões Ring Complex; 7—Jaguari Granite; 8—Cambaı́ Complex—southern region and Cerro Mantiqueiras Ophiolite; 9—Lavras do Sul Intrusive Complex; 10—Hilário Formation (trachyandesites); 11—Rodeio Velho Formation (tholeiites); and 12—Santa Maria Chico Granulite Complex. C—Dom Feliciano collisional belt, modified from Phillipp et al. (2000) and Koester et al. (2001), including the Porongos Belt and the Pelotas Batholith: 1— Encruzilhada do Sul Intrusive Suite; 2—Arroio dos Ratos Complex; 3—Quitéria and Cordilheira metagranites; 4—Arroio Moinho Granite; 5— Pinheiro Machado Suite (PMS) and Piratini gneiss (T DM Nd ages for old- and young-PMS, see text for details); 6—Capão do Leão Granite. In (B) and (C), numbers are for T DM(Nd) model ages (Ga) of the studied units. Post-Devonian sediments as in Fig. 1A, and white for sedimentary units of the Camaquã Basin. HKCA—high-K calc-alkaline; CA—calc-alkaline. For references see text and Table 1. cant effect on the (La/Nb)N ratio (Weaver, 1991). Nevertheless, intrusive basic-to-intermediate rocks in the two age groups show larger variations in trace elements, probably due to open-system differentiation in shallow magma reservoirs. 2.2. Mesozoic The Cretaceous tholeiitic magmatism of the Paraná Province covered the Phanerozoic Paraná Basin sedimentary sequences, deposited after the end of the Brasiliano Cycle. It was erupted during a period of ca. 10 my, with a marked peak at 133–129 Ma (Stewart et al., 1996; Hawkesworth et al., 1999). Alkalic magmatism including sodic and potassic rocks is present in several provinces, and carbonatites are confined to discrete centres surrounding the basin (Fig. 1B). These rocks were coeval with and postdated the tholeiites. Table 3 summarizes the Mesozoic igneous events from southernmost Brazil, Sample Lithology SiO2 TiO2 FeOt P2O5 Sr mg TDM (Ga) e Nd(t) f Sm/Nd Rb/Sr I Sr La/NbNa La/YbNb Ba/Rb Ti/Y Zr/Y Ba/Nb Zr/Nb Reference A. Neoproterozoic post-collisional associations—Dom Feliciano Orogeny (605–550 Ma)—Camaquã Basin Early magmatic episode, shoshonitic volcano-plutonic association—Lavras do Sul Intrusive Complex and Hilário Formation (599 Kl 647E Minette 44.51 2.51 11.13 1.61 1948 58 1.48 4.36 0.50 0.057 0.705432 2.8 64.5 Kl 647A Ol minette 47.33 2.54 9.35 0.88 1210 69 1.39 2.68 0.47 0.099 0.7047 1.6 41.1 And 5T Trachyandesite 56.25 0.99 6.63 0.25 1285 53 1.97 8.96 0.43 0.267 0.70472 – 24.9 Lp 401 Sperssatite 57.9 0.91 7.13 0.44 687 59 – – – – – 3.1 20.5 Ba 7T Basaltic 53.53 1.03 8.69 0.21 710 63 1.42 2.32 0.45 0.019 0.704963 3.7 39.4 trachyandesite Lp 21T Spessartite 56.95 0.94 6.45 0.48 803 63 1.93 8.82 0.44 0.06 0.705254 3.4 24.7 Ma). 37.8 19.4 31.0 26.8 18.1 488 750 – 287 247 23.4 14.6 21.6 – 9.7 11.2 51.1 37.4 – 97.7 77.5 5.5 7.9 – 13.2 20.0 177 5.9 70.3 12.7 1–2 3–4 Ma)—Dom Feliciano Belt 1.32 +2.17 +3.73 +2.87 0.28 0.19 0.12 0.12 0.062 0.021 0.021 0.025 0.70364 0.70433 0.70441 0.70453 1.5 1.0 1.6 1.2 9.2 8.2 8.2 3.9 33.9 24.8 11.9 15.7 359 549 464 395 8.1 7.0 7.0 7.0 31.8 15.0 12.8 27.5 14.3 10.4 15.0 23.7 5–6 0.70489 0.70879 0.71077 0.70312 – 0.7044 0.9 2.2 1.8 0.6 3.7 0.7 – – – 1.2 2.6 1.3 11.5 12.9 10.7 5.8 1.3 4.4 361 469 474 297 212 269 6.3 7.3 7.0 3.0 3.4 3.4 19.8 37.8 29.0 16.5 68.0 6.2 8.3 13.1 9.8 12.8 44.5 14.8 7–8 0.70549 0.70346 – 0.70444 2.3 1.8 2.1 2.2 5.9 5.0 5.8 6.0 6.4 7.0 7.1 7.9 219 232 234 237 5.9 5.6 5.6 5.7 38.6 28.7 28.6 30.7 17.0 13.5 13.8 15.0 9–10 10.1 – – 3.4 8.1 7.2 161 228 200 4.7 57.4 6.0 75.4 5.2 39.2 15.0 12.6 13.2 7–8 C. Mesoproterozoic and Paleoproterozoic, intraplate tholeiitic events (1.8–1.6 Ga)—Rio de la Plata Azul and Tandil dykes (1.59 Ga), Tandilia belt. A 38 High-Ti basalt 47.87 3.73 14.72 1.47 309 40 2.32 1.10 0.33 0.263 MT 70 High-Ti basalt 48.58 1.96 14.93 0.98 422 43 2.65 7.19 0.43 0.084 MT 67 High-Ti basalt 48.2 1.9 14.59 0.96 448 46 – – – 0.097 A2 Low-Ti basalt 50.1 1.29 12.09 0.12 154 51 – – – 0.11 A 16 Low-Ti basalt 50.39 0.92 10.19 0.1 171 53 2.6 0.25 0.18 – A5 Low-Ti basalt 50.63 0.99 10.7 0.11 138 57 2.6 +4.68 +0.01 0.043 Uruguayan dyke swarm (1.73 Ga), Piedra Alta Terrane. UR 4 Andesite 57.53 0.95 9.3 0.14 207 40 3.01 5.58 0.28 0.242 UR 28 Basaltic andesite 55.57 0.93 9.91 0.14 198 44 – – – 0.207 UR 46 Basaltic andesite 55.12 0.86 9.17 0.13 225 50 2.48 2.03 0.35 – UR 33 Basaltic andesite 54.66 0.83 9.29 0.12 189 52 2.42 1.22 0.34 0.164 Craton D. Paleoproterozoic post-tectonic, calc-alkaline event—Rio A 54 Andesite 59.69 0.78 8.51 0.32 A 41 Andesite 58.12 0.8 8.44 0.29 A 40 Basaltic andesite 56.46 0.77 9.38 0.39 dykes (2.02 Ga) 0.70386 2.7 0.70504 2.6 0.70376 3.3 de la Plata Craton, 375 43 2.76 666 53 2.71 564 57 2.66 Tandilia Belt–Tandil 3.61 0.41 0.39 3.50 0.43 0.089 2.73 0.43 0.073 Major elements on volatile-free basis (wt.%); mg=100*MgO/(MgO+FeO), mol% and FeO=0.85*FeOt; e Nd(t) and I Sr—calculated for the mean age referred in each case, T DM(Nd) model age for DMM values from Goldstein et al. (1984 in Rollinson, 1993), and both e Nd(t) and f Sm/Nd for CHUR values from Goldstein et al. (1984, in Rollinson, 1993). Ratios normalized for: a—primitive mantle (Hofmann, 1988), b—chondrite (Boynton, 1984 in Rollinson, 1993). Bold for samples taken as the reference component of the UDS-like enriched mantle type. References: 1—M.C. Gastal (unpublished data), 2—Gastal et al. (submitted for publication), 3—de Lima (1995), 4—F. Chemale Jr. (unpublished data), 5—Girardi et al. (1996), 6— Mazzucchelli et al. (1995), 7—Iacumin et al. (2001), 8—Teixeira et al. (2002), 9—Bossi et al. (1993), 10—Teixeira et al. (1999). *—Samples of the Hilário Formation (de Lima, 1995), whose Nd–Sr isotopes are of equivalent samples from F. Chemale Jr. (unpublished data). M.C.P. Gastal et al. / Lithos 82 (2005) 345–377 B. Neoproterozoic post-tectonic association—São Gabriel Orogeny (820–700 Transitional to alkaline basalts—Treinta Y Tres dykes (750 Ma). U 122 Basalt 47.08 3.47 16.06 1.47 502 35 1.82 U 136 Basalt 46.73 3.02 12.06 0.68 605 54 1.66 U 140 Basalt 46.77 2.17 11.15 0.39 670 59 1.67 U 127 Basalt 47.05 1.78 10.23 0.25 550 65 1.83 354 Table 2 Nd–Sr isotopes and chemical data for representative samples of Proterozoic post-tectonic and intraplate, basic to intermediate rocks from southern Brazil, Uruguay and Argentina M.C.P. Gastal et al. / Lithos 82 (2005) 345–377 12 150 A TP B TA PT BTA 100 TB 6 High-Ti PM BAS 8 OIB 50 Alkaline 2 Subalkaline 0 Low-Ti Ti/Zr Na 2O+K 2O 10 4 355 LC B BA A 0 41 46 51 56 61 0 200 400 SiO2 50 600 800 1000 Ti/Y C D 80 Slab fluid Slab fluid ER Ba/La (La/Yb)N LC 10 ER OIB LC OIB 10 PM 7 0.4 1 (La/Nb)N 8 Western Neoproterozoic foreland Early magmatic event (605 - 580 Ma) Minette dykes Basaltic trachyandesites Trachyandesites Opx-bearing diorites and monzodiorites Spessartites Late magmatic event (575 - 550 Ma) Opx-bearing diorites and monzodiorites 1 0.4 PM 1 (La/Nb)N 8 Proterozoic basic-intermediate dykes Calc-alkaline Tandil dykes Uruguayan dyke swarm (UDS) Low-Ti basaltic andesites High-Ti andesites Tandil tholeiitic dykes Low-Ti basalts High-Ti basalts Treinta Y Tres dykes Transitional to alkalic basalts Fig. 3. Major and trace-element ratios for representative samples of basic to intermediate rocks from Proterozoic associations (MgON4 wt.%, anhydrous basis and FeO=0.85*FeOt). A—Total alkalis vs. silica diagram with the fields from Le Maitre (1989): B—basalt, BA—basaltic andesite, A—andesite, TB—trachybasalt, BTA—basaltic trachyandesite, TA—trachyandesite, BAS—basanite, PT—phonolitic tephrite, and TP—tephritic phonolite; dashed line is the dividing of alkaline and subalkaline compositions (Irvine and Baragar, 1971). B—Ti/Zr vs. Ti/Y with the fields for high-Ti and low-Ti, Cretaceous Paraná basalts as detailed in Fig. 4B. C and D—Ba/La and (La/Yb)N (chondrite normalized— Boynton, 1984) vs. (La/Nb)N (primitive mantle normalized—Hofmann, 1988) diagrams, respectively. PM—primitive mantle (Hofmann, 1988), LC—lower crust (Wedepohl, 1995), slab fluid and ER—melt derived from an eclogite restite (Tatsumi, 2000), OIB—ocean island basalts (Sun, 1980 in Rollinson, 1993). For OIB, (La/Yb)N is the average for selected samples of alkalic basalts (MgON4 wt.%) from Hawaii (GEOROC database, http://georoc.mpch-mainz.gwdg.de/). 356 M.C.P. Gastal et al. / Lithos 82 (2005) 345–377 Table 3 Sketch of cretaceous magmatic events and geological units in southern Brazil, Uruguay and Paraguay Province/units/locality Age (Ma) Geochemical/geological types A. Late Cretaceous to Eocene/Oligocene (99–32 Ma) Eastern Paraguay Province—Asunción Sapucai graben. Asunción 70–32 Ultra-alkaline sodic rocks Passo da Capela Province. Piratini, Brazil 99–76 Sodic alkalic rocks B. Early Cretaceous (138–120 Ma) Eastern Paraguay Province—Asunción Sapucai graben. San Juan Bautista region Alkali basalt–trachyte suite 120 130–118 Basanite–phonolite suite 138–120 Paraná Magmatic Province. Eastern Uruguay. Lavalleja and Aiguá series 132–124 Treinta Y Tres serie Southern Brazil and Uruguay. Rondina-Palmas, Brazil 134–130 137–123 Esmeralda unit Palmas unit Gramado unit Urubici unit 129 133–127 132 Paranapanema unit 138–133 Lithology Nephelinites, phonolites and tephrites. Phonolites and tephritic phonolites. Sodic alkalic rocks. Potassic to high potassic, alkalic rocks. Potassic to high potassic, alkalic rocks. Nephelinites. Alkali gabbros, syenoggabros, syenodiorites, trachybasalts and trachyandesites. Nepheline gabbros, ijolites and Ne monzoggabros. Acid volcanics, and subvolcanic bodies. Low-Ti tholeiites. Trachydacites, trachytes, rhyolites and syenites. Alkalic basalts, as dykes or sills in shield areas. Low-Ti tholeiites. Low-Ti acid volcanics. Low-Ti tholeiites. High-Ti tholeiites, interbedded with Gramado unit. High-Ti tholeiites. Basaltic andesites and basalts. Olivine diabase. Basaltic andesites and basalts. Rhyolite and rhyodacites. Basaltic andesites and basalts. Basalts. Basalts. Acid volcanics are not shown in Fig. 1B. Data from Peate et al. (1992), Stewart et al. (1996), Comin-Chiaramonti and Gomes (1996), CominChiaramonti et al. (1997), Viero (1998), and Turner et al. (1999a). Uruguay and Paraguay. Geochemical and isotope data for selected samples of, respectively, Paraná tholeiites and the potassic alkalic rocks from Eastern Paraguay Province, are in listed Table 4. For tholeiites, we selected major magma types in southern Brazil and use representative samples from Garland et al. (1996), and from Kirstein et al. (2000) in eastern Uruguay. The Paraná Magmatic Province includes voluminous flood basalts with minor silicic volcanics capping the sequence, and dyke swarms. Dominant tholeiitic, basalts and basaltic andesites were subdivided into two chemical groups (low- and high-Ti), which are geographically distributed into regional units as shown in Fig. 1B (Peate et al., 1992). High-Ti magma types have older Ar–Ar ages and predominate in the north and west, while younger low-Ti types occur in the south and east of the province (Fig. 1B and Table 3; Stewart et al., 1996). However, as discussed by Garland et al. (1996), the field relationships show that the chemical units are not chronostratigraphic. They are diachronous, so that the chemical variations in time and space reflect the distribution of source materials mostly within the lithospheric mantle as indicate the slightly high (La/ Nb)N ratios (Fig. 4C,D). In southern Brazil, high-Ti units include Paranapanema and Urubici basalts, and Gramado and Esmeralda tholeiites are the low-Ti types. The dominant Cretaceous Treinta Y Tres unit in eastern Uruguay and the low-Ti Gramado tholeiites are broadly similar (Kirstein et al., 2000; Turner et al., 1999b). Transitional to alkali basalts with low (La/ Nb)N and Zr/Nb ratios are very localized in the south of the province. They are reported in eastern Uruguay Table 4 Nd–Sr isotopes and chemical data for representative samples of Cretaceous, basic to intermediate rocks from southern Brazil, Uruguay and Paraguay Sample Lithology SiO2 TiO2 FeOt P2O5 Sr mg T DM (Ga) e Nd(t) f Sm/Nd Rb/Sr I Sr Tholeiites—Paraná Province (130 Ma) Eastern Uruguay, Treinta Y Tres serie, low-Ti types. 93L96 Basalt 51.92 1.24 9.89 0.14 248 50 1.98 93L95 Basalt 51.32 1.24 9.96 0.15 577 51 2.13 502-1008 Basaltic and. 54.02 1.18 9.91 0.16 190 52 1.2 93L93 Basaltic and. 53.69 1.23 10.22 0.14 286 53 1.87 Southern Brazil—Western Uruguay, Gramado unit, low-Ti types. MG-2 Basaltic and. 55.95 1.26 9.56 0.2 208 46 1.46 DUP-08 Basaltic and. 53.23 1.38 11.3 0.23 287 47 1.41 GB-40b Basalt 50.74 0.92 9.75 0.13 208 59 1.7 GB-20a Basalt 51.03 0.83 9.33 0.07 193 63 1.73 Southern Brazil, Urubici unit, high-Ti types. DSM-17b Basaltic and. 52.95 4.2 12.16 0.63 879 38 1.16 DSM-10 Basalt 51.84 3.7 12.01 0.56 826 41 1.18 DSM-30 Basaltic and. 52.32 3.65 11.71 0.5 657 44 1.32 Southern Brazil—Western Uruguay, Paranapanema unit, high-Ti types. CB276 Basalt 51.54 3.22 15.55 0.39 206 32 1.41 CB234 Basalt 51.73 2.68 13.44 0.37 327 40 1.2 CB747 Basalt 50.48 1.96 13.01 0.24 173 47 1.35 1 0.094 0.07 0.073 0.059 0.70712 0.707 0.70745 0.70727 3.1 2.6 1.9 2.1 48.9 53.5 35.1 28.3 11.1 17.2 13.7 13.4 0.026 0.70716 3.6 0.102 0.70725 2.2 0.1 0.70735 2.3 27.7 41.4 72.8 832 655 637 1109 10.2 14.8 19.1 29.1 22.6 47.8 25.9 36.2 6.6 6.8 6.4 6.7 18.9 11.2 12.3 564 10.2 62.7 525 13.9 36.1 572 14.8 41.6 14.0 7.2 5.9 1 2–3 7.06 7.51 0.19 8.81 0.28 0.26 0.29 0.34 0.089 0.017 0.083 0.035 0.71064 0.71023 0.7117 0.71161 2.2 2.2 2.3 2.8 3.2 3.3 5.0 4.4 11.7 27.1 17.5 33.0 232 240 227 231 4.3 4.3 5.2 5.0 36.7 38.7 32.9 47.1 19.7 18.9 19.3 22.7 4.66 4.43 3.96 3.62 0.35 0.36 0.26 0.25 0.308 0.098 0.063 0.088 0.71215 0.70856 0.70746 0.70877 2.1 1.6 1.4 1.7 6.3 4.6 3.4 4.3 6.6 12.6 13.9 6.6 236 277 275 310 5.7 5.0 4.4 4.6 32.7 28.2 25.9 21.3 14.0 11.9 12.7 13.8 1.68 2.23 3.27 0.36 0.035 0.70495 1.6 0.37 0.07 0.7052 1.5 0.35 0.055 0.70517 1.5 10.7 10.1 8.9 23.8 10.2 15.3 614 616 591 8.6 23.5 8.5 20.8 7.5 22.0 11.2 10.7 11.2 2.17 1.27 3.17 0.29 0.175 0.70552 1.4 0.33 0.049 0.7059 1.3 0.34 0.046 0.70607 1.4 3.6 3.5 4.2 10.2 15.3 17.0 402 357 436 4.8 20.0 4.6 15.0 5.1 11.1 12.6 12.8 11.2 4 M.C.P. Gastal et al. / Lithos 82 (2005) 345–377 Alkalic potassic rocks—Eastern Paraguay Province—Asunción Sapucai graben (127 Ma) Basanite–phonolite suite. 56-PS268 Ne gabbro 43.4 3.04 12.44 0.89 735 64 1.68 14.27 0.53 77-PS245 Ijolite 45.11 2.06 9.36 0.77 1624 65 1.55 12.32 0.53 D211-3088 Basanite 48.86 1.69 8.23 0.54 1216 69 1.74 12.17 0.45 D207-PS111 Tephrite 52.94 1.7 4.57 0.4 1836 76 1.95 11.81 0.39 Alkali basalt–trachyte suite. 208-3341 Alkaligabbro 46.93 2.06 11.04 0.95 2057 49 1.83 13.34 0.45 D159-PS9 Trachybasalt 50.64 1.69 8.57 0.35 1163 62 2.29 16.09 0.39 47-PS263 Syenogabbro 53.26 1.81 7.3 0.61 1618 62 2.33 16.86 0.39 La/NbNa La/YbNb Ba/Rb Ti/Y Zr/Y Ba/Nb Zr/Nb Reference 4 4 References: 1—Comin-Chiaramonti et al. (1997), 2—Kirstein et al. (2000), 3—Turner et al. (1999a), and 4—Garland et al. (1996). Conventions as in Table 2. Bold for samples taken as the reference component of the BP-like enriched mantle type. 357 358 M.C.P. Gastal et al. / Lithos 82 (2005) 345–377 12 150 TP A B PT 8 Paranapanema PM TA BAS Pitanga 100 OIB BTA Ti/Zr Na2O+K 2O 10 TB 6 Esmeralda Urubici Alkaline 4 50 Gramado 2 LC Subalkaline 0 41 B 46 BA 51 A 56 0 61 0 200 400 SiO2 600 800 1000 Ti/Y 80 50 C D Slab fluid Slab fluid (La/Yb)N ER Ba/La LC 10 ER LC OIB OIB 10 PM 7 0.4 1 8 (La/Nb)N 1 0.4 PM 1 (La/Nb)N 8 40 Slab fluid E Cretaceous Paraná Magmatic Province ER LC High-Ti Paranapanema unit Ba/La High-Ti Urubici unit Low-Ti Esmeralda unit Low-Ti Gramado Unit Low-Ti Trienta Y Tres Unit Transitional to alkali basalt dykes (Rondina-Palmas) OIB 10 PM Eastern Paraguay Province ASU-K basanite-phonolite suite ASU-K alkali basalt-trachyte suite 7 10 80 Ba/Nb Fig. 4. Major and trace-element ratios for selected samples of basic to intermediate rocks from Cretaceous provinces (MgON4 wt.%, anhydrous basis and FeO=0.85*FeOt). A—Total alkalis vs. silica diagram with the fields from Le Maitre (1989), as in Fig. 3A. B—Ti/Zr vs. Ti/Y diagram with the subdivisions and fields for Cretaceous Paraná basalts according to Peate et al. (1992), and Peate and Hawkesworth (1996). High-Ti types: Pitanga, Paranapanema and Urubici, and low-Ti types: Gramado and Esmeralda. C and D—Ba/La and (La/Yb)N vs. (La/Nb)N diagrams, as in Fig. 3C–D. E—Ba/La vs. Ba/Nb diagram. Mantle and crust components as in Fig. 3. M.C.P. Gastal et al. / Lithos 82 (2005) 345–377 (Kirstein et al., 2000), and occur as dykes or sills in southern Brazil (Table 3, Figs. 2A and 4A,B; Viero, 1998). High- and low-Ti tholeiites from the lava field have evolved CIPW quartz-normative compositions (mgb65%), and they experienced extensive differentiation in low-pressure magma reservoirs (Garland et al., 1996; Peate and Hawkesworth, 1996). High-Ti basalts are more evolved, being characterized by elevated values of FeOt, P2O5, Ti/Y, Ba/Rb, Ti/Zr and Zr/Y, and low Ba/La and Ba/Nb ratios (Table 4; Fig. 4B–E). Differences among diverse high-Ti magma types can result from distinct degrees of previous depletion caused by partial melting (Peate et al., 1992, 1999). High-Ti Paranapanema tholeiites have chemistry comparable to that of the Neoproterozoic Trienta Y Tres transitional dykes, and the two show similar values of Ti/Y, (La/Nb)N, Ba/Nb and Ba/La (Tables 2 and 4; Figs. 3 and 4). Southern Paraná, low-Ti tholeiites are less fractionated (mg of 40– 65%) and characterized by low Ti/Y ratios (Fig. 4B). They show a marked enrichment of LILE over HFSE and LREE (Peate et al., 1992). Compared with the high-Ti types, they have lower Sr and P2O5 contents and Ba/Rb ratio, and higher (La/Nb)N and Zr/Nb ratios (Table 4; Fig. 4C–E). However, Esmeralda tholeiites exhibit more depleted trace-element compositions showing high Ti/Zr and low (La/Yb)N ratios (Fig. 4B,D). The enriched low-Ti Gramado basalts in turn have trace-element contents broadly similar to those from the Paleoproterozoic Uruguayan tholeiites (UDS), as mentioned by Iacumin et al. (2003). Compared with these Paleoproterozoic dykes, they are slightly enriched in Ti, Ba, Nb, Zr, Y and heavy rare earth elements—HREE. They show similar Ti/Y, Ba/Nb and Ba/La ratios, but higher Ti/Zr and Ba/Rb and lower Zr/Y, (La/Nb)N and Zr/Nb ratios (Tables 2 and 4; Figs. 3 and 4). Alkalic provinces include mainly mafic potassic rocks, formed from early Cretaceous up to late Cretaceous/Paleocene (Gibson et al., 1996; CominChiaramonti et al., 1997). Two compositional groups are recognized based on TiO2 and trace-element contents, and Sr–Nd isotope ratios. They also show a north–south provinciality, with the high-Ti group in north–northeast and the low-Ti types in the south of the Paraná lava field (Gibson et al., 1996). In the Eastern Paraguay Province, the potassic rocks from the 359 Asunción–Sapucai graben best represent the low-Ti potassic types (ASU—Fig. 1B; Comin-Chiaramonti et al., 1997). They consist of moderately to strongly potassic rocks, and form two suites, basanite-tophonolite (BP-ASU) and alkali basalt-to-trachyte (ABT-ASU) and their intrusive analogues (Fig. 4A). The two suites have mostly low TiO2 content and Ti/Zr ratio that suggest a previous Ti-depletion (Fig. 4B; Table 4). They also have Zr/Y, Ba/La, Ba/Nb and Zr/ Nb ratios higher than those of ocean island basalts— OIB (Fig. 4C). The BP-ASU rocks often exhibit a more fractionated rare earth elements (REE) pattern, higher Ti/Y ratio and higher contents of Rb, K, Zr, Ti and Y (Fig. 4B,D). This more incompatible-elementenriched chemistry is comparable to that of minette dykes from the western Neoproterozoic foreland in the southern Brazilian Shield, which show similar values of TiO2, FeOt, P2O5, REE, Rb, Sr, Y, Rb/Sr, Ti/Y, Zr/ Nb and Ba/Nb, but more pronounced enrichment of Ba, Ta, Nb and Zr (Tables 2 and 4). Late Cretaceous/ Oligocene sodic rocks in eastern Paraguay postdated potassic suites in the province (Table 3). However, they are high-Ti types showing lower (La/Nb)N ratios (Comin-Chiaramonti et al., 1997). Sodic alkalic rocks with high (La/Nb)N form the late Cretaceous Passo da Capela Province in southernmost Brazil (Figs. 1B and 2A; Barbieri et al., 1987; Viero, 1998). 3. Theoretical Sm–Nd approach 3.1. e Nd-evolutionary patterns Fig. 5 depicts the Nd isotope systematics for the definition of crust-formation events and the evolution of granitic magmas, adopted by DePaolo and coworkers (DePaolo, 1981; Farmer and DePaolo, 1983; Nelson and DePaolo, 1985). The slope of the Ndevolution line will change if further fractionation of Sm from Nd occurs, as exemplified in this figure. The fractionation factor a Sm/Nd between Sm/Nd values from melt (m) and protolith (p) respectively describes the magma evolutionary histories. If a Sm/Ndb1, the T DM(Nd) age of the magma will be lower than those at t 1, and the opposite occurs when a Sm/NdN1. The first case commonly corresponds to the evolution of the melt, and the latter to that of the refractory residue a Sm/Nd factor will be 1 when the fractionating phases 360 M.C.P. Gastal et al. / Lithos 82 (2005) 345–377 New crust at t2 DMM 10 Crust formation 5 Mixture old crust + juvenile materials 0 dεNd/dt 8 -5 εNd αSm/Nd > 1 TDM > tCF -10 -15 αSm/Nd< 1 TDM < tCF Partial melting at t2 Total melting Nd Sm or D /D ≈ 1 TDM = tCF -20 -25 fSm/Nd αSm/Nd = Sm/Nd m /Sm/Nd p t1 = tCF t2 -30 0 0.5 1 1.5 2 T (Ga) Fig. 5. Schematic diagram of Nd systematic according to Farmer and DePaolo (1983). The mantle evolution curve is for the depleted mantle— DMM from Goldstein et al. (1984). Old crust produced at t 1, and the effects of partial melting and mixing between the old crust and juvenile magmas are shown at time t 2. Growth lines for crustal segments are for a nearly constant value of f Sm/Nd~ 0.40 (Bennett and DePaolo, 1987). Solid lines represent the isotopic evolution of the material produced at time t 1 and t 2, and dashed lines are the extrapolation of growth lines backward in time until they intercept the DMM curve (t CF—age of the crust formation; a Sm/Nd—fractionation factor, superscript m and p for melt and protolith, respectively; and D Nd and D Sm—weighted mean of partition coefficients for all fractionated phases). have little effect on the Sm/Nd ratios, or in particular cases of total melting. A powerful petrogenetic approach is available when the crystallization age of the rock is known from other methods. The bulk of the continental crust has values of the fractionation factor ( f Sm/Nd, DePaolo and Wasserburg, 1979) that are 40% lower than those at depleted MORB mantle—DMM, resulting in contrasting e Nd-growth paths (Farmer and DePaolo, 1983; Nelson and DePaolo, 1985; Bennett and DePaolo, 1987). The alignments of samples with different ages along continuous paths, clustering around the average crustal rocks, thus define crustal or tectonic provinces (Bennett and DePaolo, 1987). Discontinuities in this pattern, marked by increasing e Nd values at successively younger ages, can be due to new inputs of mantle-derived magmas (Fig. 5). For these purposes, however, the simplified btwo-stageQ model for crust formation is adopted, in which the evolution first occurs in a depleted mantle and next in the continental crust (DePaolo, 1981). We have enlarged the compiled Nd-database of Gastal et al. (in press), to improve the character- ization of Paleoproterozoic source materials. Nd isotopic values were selected from geological units whose crystallization ages are well constrained by U–Pb, Ar–Ar or Pb-evaporation methods. In e Ndevolutionary diagrams, the main crust and mantle components correspond to e Nd-growth lines of samples taken as reference in each case (Fig. 6A,B). For other samples, the slope of e Nd-growth lines can be evaluated as the enrichment factor on f Sm/Nd vs. e Nd(t) diagrams (Fig. 6C). The inclusion of basic rocks with diverse ages in these diagrams gives better information on the mantle sources over geological time. 3.2. Evaluation of the Sm/Nd fractionation Since we can estimate the fractionation factor (a Sm/Nd) for processes such as partial melting and fractional crystallization, we can investigate the modifications caused by igneous differentiation to understand the significance of Nd isotopes. The analysis is made on the deviations introduced by the Sm–Nd fractionation on e Nd(0) values and T DM(Nd) ages, M.C.P. Gastal et al. / Lithos 82 (2005) 345–377 A Early Brasiliano Orogeny B Transamazonian Orogenies 10 Brasiliano subduction-related lithosphere DMM DMM IAB 5 361 W 0 CV εNd -5 -10 Paleoproterozoic to Neoproterozoic crust in collisional belt (CC) -15 UDS Trans-Amazonian subcontinental lithosphere BP -20 Neoarchean-Paleoproterozoic lower crust (LC) -25 -30 0 0.5 1.5 1 3 2.5 2 1 0.5 T (Ga) -0.1 1.5 2.5 2 T (Ga) C D W W IAB IAB -0.2 fSm/Nd -0.3 UDS ABT UDS CV -0.4 -0.5 BP -0.6 -20 -15 -10 -5 0 εNd(t) 5 -20 -15 -10 Santa Maria Chico Granulite Complex (LC) 0 Buenos Aires Complex Uruguayan dyke swarm (UDS) Low-Ti basaltic andesites High-Ti andesites Tandil tholeiitic dykes Low-Ti basalts High-Ti basalts Neoproterozoic - Eopaleozoic 5 Dom Feliciano Belt Pinheiro Machado Suite (CC) Trienta Y Tres dykes São Gabriel Arc Cambaí-Vacacaías sociation (CV) Cerro Mantiqueiras Ophiolite IAB E TC W -5 εNd(0) Basic-intermediate dykes Calc-alkaline Tandil dykes 0 5 Neoarchaean-Mesoproterozoic Arroio dos Ratos Complex (CC) -5 εNd(t) -10 -15 BP -20 UDS ABT Harzburgites (W) Amphibolites (IAB) Camaquã Basin Minettes Rodeio Velho Formation -25 -30 0.08 0.10 0.12 147 0.14 0.16 0.18 144 Sm/ Nd Fig. 6. Sm–Nd isotopic ratios for Neoarchaean to early Neoproterozoic, crustal rocks and for Paleoproterozoic to Cretaceous, basic-to-intermediate igneous associations highlighting the main regional crustal and mantle segments. A and B—Nd isotopic evolutionary diagrams for respectively crust and mantle-derived rocks; Brasiliano subduction-related lithosphere includes IAB—island arc basalts, CV—Cambaı́–Vacacaı́ associations, and W—mantle wedge with old components. C and D—f Sm/Nd vs. e Nd(t) diagrams for the same associations as in (A) and (B). E—e Nd(0) vs. 147 Sm/144Nd diagram for basic to intermediate rocks with diverse ages, and some of the old crustal associations. TC—basalt from the Tristan da Cunha plume (Inaccessible Island, Cliff et al., 1991). In (B), (D) and (E), heavy and dotted lines delimit the fields respectively for high- and low-Ti Paraná tholeiites, black star for low-Ti Trienta Y Tres tholeiites, and symbols for alkalic suites from the Eastern Paraguay Province as in Fig. 4. 362 M.C.P. Gastal et al. / Lithos 82 (2005) 345–377 respectively, De Nd(0)=(e Nd(0)p e Nd(0)m) and DT DM= p (T DM T m DM) (superscript p and m for protolith and melt, respectively). These deviations are related to the time of the subsequent event (t 2), as shown in Fig. 5, but the controls act in an opposite way. The difference of enrichment factors between protolith p and melt ( f Sm/Nd f m Sm/Nd) describes the change in the slope of the e Nd-growth line, with t 2 determining the amount of the deviation on e Nd(0) values. The older t 2 is, the larger is De Nd(0) as defined by the p relation De Nd(0)cQ*Ndt*2 ( f Sm/Nd f m Sm/Nd ) ( Q Nd = k*Sm104*[( 147Sm/ 144Nd)/( 143Nd/ 144Nd)] CHUR). For T DM(Nd) ages, the deviation introduced is proporp tional to the time between t 1 and t 2 when t 1=T DM, p as expressed by the relation: (T m DM t 2)c(T DM p m DM t 2)*( f Sm/Nd f DM Sm/Nd)/( f Sm/Nd f Sm/Nd). So the longer p the residence time (T DM t 2) is, the greater are the deviations on T DM(Nd) ages. Two-component mixing can involve either bulk assimilation (melt-rock) or two melts derived from distinct sources (mantle or crust). Selective partial melting of the veined-subcontinental lithosphere and metasomatism of the mantle are both variants of these processes. Binary mixing processes always cause modifications on initial 143Nd/144Nd ratios of the source materials. Therefore, we directed our discussion to the effect on Sm/Nd ratio depending upon the timing about the melting–crystallization event. In the equations for two-component mixing, F is the weight fraction of component A and (1 F) that of the contaminant B (Langmuir et al., 1978; DePaolo and Wasserburg, 1979). Variations on e Nd(0) values and T DM(Nd) ages are complementary, being described by a single relation (superscript M for the mixture): A B A (T ADM T M e Nd (0) M )/ DM )/(T DM T DM )c[(e Nd (0) A B B DM M (e Nd(0) e Nd(0) )]*[( f Sm/Nd f Sm/Nd)/(f Sm/Nd f DM Sm/ A e Nd(0)M)/(e Nd(0)A e Nd(0)B)c Nd), where (e Nd(0) NdB*(1 F)/NdM. The effects on the Nd isotope composition of the magma caused by adding a small weight fraction of the contaminant can be better assessed made (1 F)~0. This reveals that the deviations are independent of the time, except e Nd(t). They depend upon the isotope composition, and are strongly controlled by chemical parameters such as NdB/NdA and f BSm/Nd/f A Sm/Nd. For compositions with very different incompatible elements patterns (depleted and enriched), the T DM(Nd) age of the mixture approximates that from the enriched end-member. The closest approximation occurs for strong chemical and weak isotope contrasts, when the T DM(Nd) age stays nearly constant and the e Nd values change regularly by varying F. In this case, as the younger the mixing event is, the larger the deviations on e Nd(t) are (see Fig. 9A). When the two end-members are chemically more similar, the e Nd values and T DM(Nd) ages vary regularly depending upon the initial isotope differences. This is the usual situation of mixing between juvenile and old crustal segments (Fig. 5). 4. Nd isotopes in Cretaceous igneous rocks and evidence for different mantle sources Trace-element ratios and Sr–Nd–Pb isotopes of Paraná basalts have been attributed to incompatibleelement-enriched components in the subcontinental lithosphere, though crustal contamination is also reported (Gibson et al., 1996; Garland et al., 1996; Peate and Hawkesworth, 1996; Comin-Chiaramonti et al., 1997; Hawkesworth et al., 1999). Such features can be due to contamination of the asthenosphere-derived magmas as they pass through the lithosphere, or may result exclusively from partial melting of the subcontinental lithosphere. OIB-like asthenospheric sources were reported for some basalts in eastern Uruguay (Kirstein et al., 2000), and for transitional and alkali basalts from dykes and sills in southernmost Brazil (Viero, 1998). Sodic alkalic rocks from both the Passo da Capela and the Eastern Paraguay provinces have young Nd model ages (1.1–0.6 Ga, Fig. 1B). An analogous origin may be inferred for the two provinces, but in the former the high (La/Nb)N ratios imply the involvement of lithospheric mantle materials (Barbieri et al., 1987). High- and low-Ti tholeiites from the lava field and the potassic alkalic rocks from Eastern Paraguay Province (ASU) all have T DM(Nd) ages older than 0.9 Ga, and (La/Nb)N ratios higher than 1 (Figs. 1 and 4C–D; Table 4). ASU-potassic rocks show the lowest e Nd(t), implying mantle sources with a longer residence time (Fig. 6B,D). They also have high average I Sr value of 0.706–0.707, so that they are a useful endmember for magmas derived from a previously modified subcontinental lithosphere. According to Comin-Chiaramonti et al. (1997), the modifications M.C.P. Gastal et al. / Lithos 82 (2005) 345–377 of mantle sources of ASU-potassic rocks occurred in an old subduction-related environment, but the enrichment events were promoted by very small degrees of peridotite melting (~0.2%). The alkali basalt–trachyte suite from this province shows slightly lower e Nd(t) ( 13.3 to 16.0) and older T DM(Nd) ages of 2.3–1.7 Ga (ABT—Fig. 6B,D; Table 4). The least fractionated samples from this suite plot close to the Paleoproterozoic UDS-tholeiites on the e Nd(0) vs.147Sm/144Nd diagram (Fig. 6D,E). Their patterns of incompatible elements mimic those from the UDS-tholeiites that have a subduction signature (Gastal et al., in press). Most of the ASU-potassic rocks are roughly aligned between the two end-members on e Nd(0) vs.147Sm/ 144 Nd (BP and UDS—Fig. 6E), and the same occurs in the e Nd(0) vs. 1/Nd diagram (not shown). Although the geochemical contrasts between the two ASUpotassic suites are small (Fig. 4; Table 4), Nd isotopes suggest distinct degrees of re-enrichment of a previously subduction-modified mantle. Two of the less evolved potassic rocks of the basanite–phonolite suite from this province have T DM ages of 1.7–1.5 Ga and low 147Sm/144Nd (Fig. 6E; Table 4). They are taken as representative of melts derived from the previously subduction-modified old mantle later enriched in incompatible elements (BP—Fig. 6B,D–E; Table 4). Contrasts of Nd–Sr isotopes and trace-element ratios between and within the two chemical groups of Paraná basalts suggest distinct parental magmas and mantle sources (Peate et al., 1992; Garland et al., 1996; Hawkesworth et al., 1999). High-Ti tholeiites (Paranapanema and Urubici units) are isotopically homogeneous with T DM(Nd) ages ranging from 1.5 to 0.9 Ga and have a Nd–Sr primitive isotope signature (Fig. 1B; Table 4). Contamination with crustal components was subordinate in these tholeiites, and its origin has been related to smalldegree silicate melts, either during the magmatism or in the development of REE-enriched source materials (Garland et al., 1996; Hawkesworth et al., 1999). Nonetheless, Urubici basalts exhibit Sr– Nd–Pb isotopes close to those of anomalous basalts from the Walvis Ridge, which define the EM-I component in the nomenclature of Zindler and Hart (1986), as discussed by Peate et al. (1999). These authors attributed this isotope signature to the involvement of the Brasiliano lithosphere. Low-Ti 363 basalts from southern Paraná (Esmeralda, Gramado and Trienta Y Tres units) exhibit varied Sr–Nd–Pb isotope compositions and older T DM(Nd) ages of 2.4 to 1.3 Ga (Figs. 1B and 5B,D). Gramado and Treinta Y Tres basalts are isotopically enriched with low e Nd(t) (0 to 8) and high I Sr (N0.707). They are regionally heterogeneous with striking evidence for open-system differentiation at shallow levels. In spite of this, it has been proposed that they derived by extensive melting of a previously depleted lithospheric mantle that was subsequently REEenriched (Peate and Hawkesworth, 1996; Kirstein et al., 2000). However, the mantle source of these tholeiites is still a controversial question. CominChiaramonti et al. (1997, 1999) suggested their derivation from the same mantle end-member of mafic potassic suites from the Eastern Paraguay Province (ASU). Nevertheless, Kirstein et al. (2000) rejected this hypothesis based on modelling of traceelement ratios such as Th/Nd and Ti/Y. Esmeralda tholeiites have more depleted trace-element and isotopic compositions, probably resulting from the mixture between an asthenospheric MORB-like source and the evolved and contaminated Gramado basalt (Peate and Hawkesworth, 1996). In summary, the Paraná magma types and subcoeval alkalic rocks tapped a regionally heterogeneous and stratified subcontinental lithosphere and had a subordinate contribution from MORB- or OIBlike asthenospheric sources. In southern Brazil and Uruguay, these rocks demonstrate that the subcontinental lithosphere is heterogeneous and was intensely modified during old events, as initially cited by Hawkesworth et al. (1988). In addition, the similarity for geochemical and isotopic data between some Cretaceous and Proterozoic basic rocks, as extensively discussed by Iacumin et al. (2003), seems to constrain the time of the main modifications to the lithospheric mantle in this region to the Neoarchaean–Paleoproterozoic. 5. Nd isotopes in Proterozoic basic-to-intermediate igneous rocks and the lithospheric mantle components Like the Cretaceous basic-to-intermediate igneous rocks in the region, most of the Proterozoic rocks 364 M.C.P. Gastal et al. / Lithos 82 (2005) 345–377 exhibit high (La/Nb)N ratios (Fig. 3C,D; Table 2), implying subduction-related mantle materials or contamination with the old, recycled crust. Igneous suites with a younger isotope signature are produced during the early Neoproterozoic subduction event (Fig. 6A; Table 1), whereas those with an older signature are derived from the subcontinental lithosphere modified during the Trans-Amazonian or older orogenies. e Nd(0) lower than 9 and T DM(Nd) ages older than 1.4 Ga (mostly N1.6 Ga) characterize the latter (Fig. 6B). They also have distinct f Sm/Nd resulting from the fractionation of Sm–Nd during the magma genesis, or from diverse REE-enriched mantle materials (Fig. 6D). Two extreme compositions, based on Nd isotopes and the trace-element behaviour, suggest at least two end-members for the mantle modified during Neoarchaean–Paleoproterozoic subduction events as proposed by Gastal et al. (in press). One end-member has a strong signature of these events, while the other one has a more enriched, non-subduction-related isotope and geochemical signature. Besides the two main end-members, we may speculate about the presence of other REE-enriched mantle components less affected by Proterozoic subduction events. They would be represented by rocks with low (La/Nb)N ratios (V2, Fig. 3C,D), but distinct Sr–Nd isotope ratios. These rocks include the more radiogenic, Mesoproterozoic high-Ti tholeiites from Tandil and the Neoproterozoic Treinta Y Tres transitional dykes that have more juvenile Sr–Nd signature (Fig. 6B,D). The two sets of dykes, however, have a much-localized occurrence. In addition, most of the Mesoproterozoic Tandil dykes are low-Ti tholeiites characterized by a primitive Sr–Nd isotope signature (Fig. 6B; Table 2), low (La/Yb)N ratios (Fig. 3D), and REE patterns like E-MORB as argued by Iacumin et al. (2001). They were derived from a mantle extremely depleted by partial melting, which might be equivalent to the asthenosphere or else to the DMM-like matrix of the Paleoproterozoic subcontinental lithosphere. This mantle could also include incompatible-elementenriched domains with varied origins, such as that responsible for the generation of the coeval high-Ti tholeiites. A similar situation in the early Neoproterozoic subcontinental lithosphere could be responsible for the characteristics of the Neoproterozoic Treinta Y Tres transitional dykes, and some of the Cretaceous high-Ti Paranapanema basalts. 5.1. Old subduction-related lithospheric mantle type (UDS-like component) Paleoproterozoic calc-alkaline Tandil-andesites and the Mesoproterozoic low-Ti UDS-tholeiites, both have T DM(Nd) ages older than 2.4 Ga, low e Nd(t) values and typically a subduction geochemical filiation (Figs. 3C,D and 6B–D; Table 2). Their origin has been related to the mantle modified during the Neoarchaen– Paleoproterozoic orogenies. The 2.02 Ga-old Tandil dykes plot on the same e Nd-growth line of the other Paleoproterozoic associations thought to derive from the lithospheric mantle produced during the Neoarchaean accretionary orogenies (Fig. 6A). However, the two set of dykes have high values of both (La/Nb)N and (La/Yb)N ratios. To explain their geochemistry Iacumin et al. (2001, 2003) argued that the enrichment events had been promoted by melts derived from the subducted material present in mantle sources. In the UDS-tholeiites, decreasing e Nd(t) values and the increase of Sm/Nd occur with the differentiation (Fig. 6D,E). Then the less evolved basaltic andesites show the highest 143Nd/144Nd initial ratios, and only the most evolved and enriched UDS-andesites plot in the same e Nd-growth line of calc-alkaline Tandil dykes (Fig. 6B). This suggests the contamination of UDS melts with old REE-enriched materials with Nd isotopes akin those of the Paleoproterozoic Tandil dykes, corroborating the proposition of Iacumin et al. (2001, 2003). Despite these differences, trace-element ratios for the two sets of dykes show that they were produced from similarly enriched mantle materials. The wide occurrence of UDS makes the low-Ti tholeiites the best representatives of magmas derived from the subcontinental lithosphere strongly modified during the Neoarchaean–Paleoproterozoic subduction events. The two least evolved UDS-basaltic andesites are thus considered as equivalent to melts derived from this mantle end-member (UDS—Fig. 6B–E; Table 2). Based on Nd isotopes, analogous mantle materials seem to be also involved in the generation of the Cretaceous enriched, low-Ti basalts and the alkali basalt–trachyte ASU suite. The higher e Nd(t) values in the former also indicate the contribution of more juvenile source materials (Fig. 6B). Even so, the geochemical and isotope features of these Proterozoic and Cretaceous rocks allow the conclusion that the subcontinental lithosphere beneath the southern Bra- M.C.P. Gastal et al. / Lithos 82 (2005) 345–377 fractionated compositions, with Sm–Nd isotopes and patterns of incompatible elements similar to those of the more enriched Cretaceous basanite–phonolite ASU suite (Tables 2 and 4; Figs. 3B–D, 4B–B and 6B). The two least evolved potassic rocks from the latter, as previously cited, are thought to represent the endmember of an old mantle in which the subduction signature was reduced in further events (BP—Fig. 3). The enrichment now should involve some less-hydrous fluids or melts to justify the increase of trace elements such as Nb and Ta. These two potassic rocks are zilian and Uruguayan shields is dominated by an enriched mantle with a strong signature of Neoarchaean–Paleoproterozoic subductions. In the region, these events correspond to the major crust-formation period (Cordani et al., 2000; Hartmann et al., 2000). 5.2. Re-enriched old lithospheric mantle type (BP-like component) Minette dykes from the western foreland of the Dom Feliciano collisional orogeny (660–550 Ma) show São Gabriel Orogeny A 365 B Dom Feliciano Orogeny 10 DMM CV 5 DMM IAB W εNd 0 CC -5 BP-ASU -10 LC -15 UDS -20 Foreland Pelotas Batholith -25 -30 0 0.5 1.5 1 2 0.5 -0.1 1 1.5 2 T (Ga) T (Ga) C Late Neoproterozoic igneous associations Pelotas Batholith (660 - 580 Ma) IAB -0.2 Syn-transcurrent granitic suites W Post-tectonic, calc-alkaline and alkaline granitic suites Alkaline granites fSm/Nd -0.3 -0.4 UDS Western foreland Early magmatic event (605 - 580 Ma) LC CC Shoshonitic rocks, and akaline granites CV Late magmatic event (575 - 550 Ma) Alkaline, metaluminous granitoids and volcanics -0.5 High-K calc-alkaline granites BP- ASU -0.6 -20 -15 -10 -5 εNd(575 Ma) 0 5 10 Fig. 7. Sm–Nd isotopic ratios for late Neoproterozoic magmatic associations from respectively the Pelotas Batholith and the western foreland. A and B—Nd isotopic evolutionary diagrams showing the main crustal and mantle segments as in Fig. 6; arrows indicate the evolution in time in each region. C—f Sm/Nd vs. e Nd (575 Ma) diagram for the two groups of rocks, compared with some older suites. Symbols for crust and mantle regional components as in Fig. 6. Crustal segments: LC—Neoarchaean–Paleoproterozoic lower crust, CC—Paleoproterozoic to Neoproterozoic crust in the collisional belt, and CV—Cambaı́–Vacacaı́ association (São Gabriel Arc). Trans-Amazonian subcontinental lithosphere: UDS-like and BP-like enriched-mantle components, and the Brasiliano subduction-related lithosphere (IAB, W and CV). 366 M.C.P. Gastal et al. / Lithos 82 (2005) 345–377 thought to have formed from incompatible-elementenriched veins in a Neoarchaean–Paleoproterozoic subduction-processed matrix of the subcontinental lithosphere. The Neoproterozoic minettes, however, show younger T DM(Nd) ages (~1.4 Ga) and higher e Nd(t) values ( 2 to 4), implying also the participation of some more juvenile materials. Differences in the behaviour of trace elements and Sr–Nd–Pb isotopes between the two minettes suggest distinct mantle sources. Gastal et al. (2003), based on Pb isotopes, pointed out that the mantle wedge modified by fluids during the 900–700 Ma early Neoproterozoic orogeny is a viable source for the olivine minette, but source materials with a longer residence time are required for the minette. The last has high (La/Nb)N similar to those of the Cretaceous BP-potassic rocks, while in the olminette this ratio is lower and akin those of the Neoproterozoic Trienta Y Tres transitional dykes characterized by more juvenile Sr–Nd ratios (Figs. 3C,D, 4C,D and 6B; Tables 2 and 4). This raises the possibility that the non-subduction enrichment of mantle sources also occurred at the end of the early Neoproterozoic orogeny. Differences in Nd isotopes between the Neoproterozoic minettes and the Cretaceous BPASU rocks may be thus due to distinct re-enrichment events of the subcontinental lithosphere already modified during old orogenies. In this way, the two Neoproterozoic minettes could be registering multiple processes of mantle metasomatism in that lithosphere at respectively the Paleoproterozoic and Neoproterozoic. This would justify their higher contents of Nb, Zr, Ta and Ba compared with Cretaceous BP rocks. In the western Neoproterozoic foreland of southern Brazilian Shield, Ordovician basalts and other Neoproterozoic basic–intermediate rocks show Nd isotope ratios that are similar either to Neoproterozoic minettes or to Cretaceous BP-potassic rocks (Figs. 6B and 7B,C; Tables 2 and 4). Minettes and some basaltic trachyandesites have Nd isotope ratios (e Nd(t)N 4) that plot between two mantle endmembers, the BP-like enriched and the IAB-like early Neoproterozoic subcontinental lithosphere, respectively. This corroborates their genesis through a binary mixing of these two mantle materials, but the involvement of crustal sources is registered in trachyandesites, spessartites and other intrusive basic rocks, which have e Nd(t) higher than 9 and older T DM(Nd) ages (N1.7 Ga) (Table 2). Furthermore, the high (La/Nb)N and (La/Yb)N in these rocks may be suggesting that the mixing processes occurred into deeper mantle levels (Fig. 3D). In spite of the genetic particularities, Nd isotopes of these basic–intermediate rocks are consistent with the major presence of a BP-like enriched mantle end-member in the region at the end of the Neoproterozoic collisional orogeny. 6. Crustal source materials for late Neoproterozoic igneous associations Three juvenile crustal segments formed in an arc setting are recognized in the southern Brazilian shield, and they have distinct Rb/Sr and geochemical signatures. They show T DM(Nd) ages close to the respective crystallization age, positive e Nd(t) values (+1 to +8), and typically crustal values of f Sm/Nd (Fig. 6A,C). The Neoarchaean–Paleoproterozoic lower crust in the Rio de la Plata Craton (LC—Fig. 6A) is equivalent to the 2.55 Ga Santa Maria Chico Granulite Complex that has a low I Sr (~0.702 at 2.03 Ga). Paleoproterozoic associations from the Tandilia Belt show Nd isotope ratios consistent with their derivation from the reworking of this old lithosphere (Hartmann et al., 2002), plotting in the same e Nd-growth of the LC-segment (Fig. 6A). Continental crust in the Dom Feliciano collisional belt is still poorly constrained in terms of Nd isotopes (CC—Fig. 6A), which are delimited by one sample from the Paleoproterozoic 2.08 Ga Arroio dos Ratos Complex, and by the sample with the highest e Nd(t) (~ 5) from the 800 Ma Pinheiro Machado Suite (old-PMS, Table 1). The Arroio dos Ratos Complex is a continental calc-alkaline arc association with high I Sr (0.711 at 723 Ma). Therefore, its e Nd-growth line was taken as the upper limit for the Nd isotopic evolution of a Paleoproterozoic crust, since primitive arc suites with similar ages also occur in the collisional belt. The oldPMS samples mostly plot on the e Nd-growth path of the Arroio dos Ratos Complex (Fig. 6A), but they exhibit lower Rb/Sr, and Sm and Nd values. The old-PMS can thus represent the products of reworking of the Paleoproterozoic crust induced by new input of mantle-derived magmas (da Silva et al., 1999). The juvenile crust produced during the São Gabriel accretionary orogeny is represented by a sample of metadiorite from the Cambaı́–Vacacaı́ association (CV— Fig. 6A), which has the value of f Sm/Nd close to the bulk M.C.P. Gastal et al. / Lithos 82 (2005) 345–377 continental crust. Most of CV association displays a low I Sr (0.7032–0.7040). e Nd-growth line for the CV sample and those representatives of the 733 Ma Cerro Mantiqueira Ophiolite delimit the Brasiliano subduction-related lithosphere (Fig. 6A). References for an IAB, and a subarc mantle wedge (W) are taken from the more primitive samples of respectively amphibolites and harzburgites from the ophiolite (Fig. 6A). 7. Nd isotope signatures of late Neoproterozoic igneous associations 7.1. Pelotas batholith The Pelotas Batholith includes a homogeneous group of granitoids with high I Sr (mostly 0.710 to 0.740). All but the alkaline granitoids (Encruzilhada do Sul Intrusive Suite—ESIS, Table 1) have e Nd(t) values in a restricted range ( 3.7 to 7.5), but large variations of f Sm/Nd ( 0.06 to 0.57) (Fig. 7A,C). Except ESIS, the magma genesis probably involved a mixture of two components with similar Nd isotope composition: the Paleoproterozoic–Neoproterozoic crust—CC, and the enriched subduction-processed mantle—UDS-like component. This is valid for the two age groups of granitoids formed respectively at ca. 800 and at ca. 600 Ma. Peraluminous metagranites show the highest I Sr (~0.740) and anomalous Nd isotopic ratios, both consistent with its formation by partial melting of CC-segments (Fernandes and Koester, 1999). For all high-K calc-alkaline granites, the increase of e Nd(t) values at younger ages suggests the contribution of a primitive mantle component at the end of the postcollisional period (~600 Ma—Fig. 7A). The primitive mantle could have been a DM-component or the BPlike end-member, but the last is more suitable to explain the geochemical affinity of the post-tectonic granitoids. The alkaline ESIS is comparable to analogous western granites produced from distinct mixed sources (Fig. 7A–C). Nd isotope data also substantiate some type of homogenization due to a major period of regional heating that occurred at ca. 640–630 Ma in the batholith (Gastal et al., in press). This event affected all but the ESIS alkaline suite on the western side of the Dorsal de Canguçu shear zone (Fig. 2C). It could be due to underplating of the voluminous amounts of mantlederived magmas, caused by post-collisional tectonic 367 relaxation or lithosphere delamination at the end of the Dom Feliciano Orogeny (~600 Ma). 7.2. Western Neoproterozoic foreland Most of the igneous associations with diversified Nd isotope compositions have low I Sr (~0.704– 0.706). Nonetheless, Nd isotope ratios are similar for both granitoids and basic–intermediate rocks in each of the two age groups of magmatic suites (605– 580 Ma and 575–550 Ma), defining two major mixing lines in e Nd(0) vs.147Sm/144Nd (not shown) and f Sm/Nd vs. e Nd(575) diagrams (Fig. 7C). The two mixing lines apparently share the same more fractionated endmember, equivalent to the BP-like mantle component. This led Gastal et al. (in press) to propose that the two age groups are related to the mixing of this REEenriched mantle with diversified components: the early Neoproterozoic IAB-like lithosphere and the Neoarchaean–Paleoproterozoic LC-segment. The 605–580 Ma-old rocks show the highest values of e Nd(t), varying from 9 up to ~0, and T DM(Nd) ages from 2.0 to 1.3 Ga (Table 2; Fig. 7B). The magma genesis for these rocks, including also granitoids, involved the early Neoproterozoic IAB-like lithosphere as the other end-member of the mixture. This is particularly valid for those intrusive and volcanic rocks occurring near the Lavras do Sul Intrusive Complex (Fig. 2B; Tables 1 and 2). In this case, the IAB-like contaminant may be the subduction-related subcontinental lithosphere, or else the arc granitoids. The 575–550 Ma-old granitoids and acid volcanics show lower e Nd(t) values ( 10 to 20), older T DM(Nd) ages (3.0–1.9 Ga) and higher I Sr (0.705– 0.713). Alkaline associations have Nd isotope ratios consistent with the old lower crust (LC) being the other end-member of the mixing processes. The wellcorrelated linear array on f Sm/Nd vs. e Nd(575) for these rocks support this idea (Fig. 7C). Such LC-contaminant seems to be also involved in the generation of some rocks of the early magmatic event (605–580 Ma), but its major participation in the magma genesis certainly occurred in the late 575–550 Ma-old event. The younger, high silica alkaline and high-K calcalkaline granites have unradiogenic initial Pb ratios and Pb inheritance up to 2.4 Ga, reinforcing this conclusion (Gastal et al., in press). These authors ascribed the increasing LC-contribution at the end of 368 M.C.P. Gastal et al. / Lithos 82 (2005) 345–377 the post-collisional period to some crustal thickening. However, as previously mentioned, trace-element ratios for basic–intermediate rocks suggest mixing processes at deeper mantle levels, which could indicate that delamination of the lithosphere occurred at this time. This is an interesting hypothesis, because we can explain the magma genesis at the end of the 600–550 Ma Dom Feliciano collisional orogeny through the same geodynamic process in both the western foreland and the collisional belt. 8. Sm–Nd fractionation during igneous processes 8.1. Partial melting Deviations due to partial melting are assessed taken non-modal batch melting models and assuming melting–segregation–extraction–emplacement processes as synchronous. Using the equations from Shaw (1970), the fractionation factor (a Sm/Nd) makes the variations on Sm/Nd ratios of melts proportional to D Nd/D Sm (D Nd and D Sm are the weighted mean of partition coefficients—Kds for all fractionating phases). The Sm/ Nd variations will be maximum and equal to a Sm/Nd at very small degree of melting ( F—melt fractionc0). In crustal assemblages with an intermediate composition and without residual garnet, a Sm/Nd is equal to or higher than 0.80 (~1.0) for the wide range of degree of melting referred in experiments (10–50%). In mantle assemblages (Kds from McKenzie and O’Nions, 1991), residual garnet and amphibole result in larger fractionation (D Nd/D Smc0.4 and 0.6), and the effect of pyroxenes and olivine is smaller (D Nd/D Smc0.7 and 0.8). Taken the composition of the garnet lherzolite from McKenzies and O’Nions (1995), the maximum a Sm/Nd is of 0.7–0.6 for degrees of melting smaller than 2%. However, a Sm/Nd is of 0.9 for 15% of melting, more suitable for the production of the commoner basalts. For the garnet–phlogopite peridotite (GPP—Erlank et al., 1987; HP3—Tatsumi and Kogiso, 1997), the main source of alkalic potassic Table 5 Deviations due to partial melting on e Nd(0) values and T DM(Nd) ages for crustal components in the southern Brazilian shield Geological units/samples Age Crustal protolith (Ga) e (t) 147Sm/144Nd f Nd p Sm/Nd e Nd(0)p T pDM (Ga) a Sm/Nd t 2* e Nd(t 2) (Ga) Neoarchaean-to-Paleoproterozoic lower crust in cratonic segments—LC Santa Maria Chico Granulitic Complex H34, 2.55 +3.33 0.1196 0.39 21.96 2.65 0.80 metabasalt1 Paleoproterozoic-to-Neoproterozoic crust in the collisional belt—CC Arroio dos Ratos Complex G3, biotite 2.08 +6.58 0.1101 0.44 16.54 2.01 tonalite2–3 Pinheiro Machado Suite (old-PMS) Rs-7b, 0.80 5.26 0.1132 0.42 13.85 1.86 granodiorite gneiss3–4 Neoproterozoic crust in the São Gabriel Arc—CV Cambaı́ Complex—Northern region Rs-20h, 0.70 +3.38 0.1162 0.41 metadiorite5 2.73 1.03 Produced melts f m Sm/Nd e Nd(0)m T m DM (Ga) Deviations De Nd(0) DT DM (Ga) 2.0 0.8 0.6 2.19 14.11 16.08 0.51 0.51 0.51 28.06 2.52 24.40 2.28 23.79 2.24 6.10 2.44 1.83 0.13 0.38 0.42 0.80 0.8 0.6 7.71 9.92 0.55 0.55 18.79 1.80 18.23 1.76 2.25 1.69 0.21 0.25 0.80 0.6 7.46 0.54 15.58 1.63 1.73 0.23 0.80 0.6 +3.44 0.53 4.51 0.95 1.78 0.08 The value of 0.80 for a Sm/Nd is taken as the maximum fractionation for crustal protoliths without residual garnet; f Sm/Nd= p m m [((147Sm/144Ndp*a Sm/Nd)/147Sm/144NdCHUR) 1]; De Nd(0)=(e Nd(0)p e Nd(0)m)ct 2*Q Nd*( f pSm/Nd f m Sm/Nd); DT DM=(T DM T DM); [(T DM p m DM 1 DM t 2)/(T DM t 2)]c[( f pSm/Nd f DM )/( f f )], for Q =25.08 Ga and f =0.087. Sm/Nd Sm/Nd Sm/Nd Sm/Nd Nd References: 1—Hartmann et al. (1999); Hartmann (1987); 2—da Silva et al. (1999); 3—Leite et al. (2000); 4—Babinski et al. (1997); 5— Babinski et al. (1996). M.C.P. Gastal et al. / Lithos 82 (2005) 345–377 contribution is required to explain the high e Nd(t) values (Fig. 8A). Some late Neoproterozoic granitoids, with anomalous T DM(Nd) ages, also show abrupt variation of Sm/Nd ratios (Fig. 7C). Such features occur in granites that have unquestionable crustal contribution, and hence they could be ascribed to major or accessory phase-driven fractionation processes (Ayres and Harris, 1997; Davies and Tommasini, 2000). This would take place in the syn-transcurrent peraluminous and highly evolved calc-alkaline granites from the Pelotas Batholith, and it could have been important in some 575–550 Ma-old granites from the western Neoproterozoic foreland. Based on Nd isotopes, therefore, we conclude that granitoids with only a crustal contribution are limited in the southern Brazilian Shield, since the mantle contribution is almost always required. For basic rocks taken as representative of mantle end-members with a Trans-Amazonian signature (UDS- and BP-like types), we want to know how closely their Nd isotope compositions reflect those of the sources. We took the crystallization ages and the values of a Sm/Nd suitable for the melting-degree in each case (Table 6). The error on e Nd(0) values would rocks and minettes, we obtained similar values of a Sm/Nd (0.87–0.81: Table 6). In the three crustal segments, we took a a Sm/Nd of 0.80 as the maximum fractionation factor and three periods of magma genesis: 2.0, 0.8 and 0.6 Ga (Table 5; Fig. 8A). The maximum deviations would be for melts derived from the LC-segment, 6 e Nd-units at 2.0 Ga and 0.4 Ga on T DM ages at 0.6 Ga. For melting events during the ca. 0.6 Ga-old Dom Feliciano Orogeny, errors of two e Nd-units could occur in the present-day isotope ratios of melts derived from all crust segments—LC, CC and CV. Deviations on T DM(Nd) ages would be lower than the resolution limit of ca. 0.2 Ga for those derived from the young CC- and CV-segments. Small errors in e Nd(0) and T DM(Nd) ages due to melting events during this orogeny could be an argument for the generation of granitoids in the Pelotas Batholith only by reworking of the CC-crust, as postulated by da Silva et al. (1999). Nevertheless, the behaviour of 147Sm/144Nd and e Nd(t) of most granitoids makes this difficult to accept (Figs. 7C and 8A). Only some highly fractionated, calc-alkaline granites (young-PMS and Arroio Moinho) may have been derived by partial melting of this CC-segment. Even so, the mantle 10 5 Rs20h CV G3 Paleoproterozoic basic rocks DTDM ≤ 0.15 Ga B DTDM ≤ 0.42 Ga DMM DMM BP-like mantle H34 CC 0 εNd Transamazonian Orogenies Early Brasiliano Orogeny A 369 LC -5 UDS-like mantle -10 -15 BP-ASU t2 = 2.0 Ga t2 = 0.6 Ga -20 ABT-ASU t2 = 0.8 Ga -25 -30 0 DεNd(0) ≤ 6.10 0.5 1 1.5 T (Ga) 2 2.5 3 0.5 Cretaceous basic rocks DεNd(0) ≤ 0.35 1 1.5 2 2.5 3 T (Ga) Fig. 8. Deviations on e Nd(0) values and T DM(Nd) ages due to Sm–Nd fractionation caused by partial melting respectively of the crust (A) and mantle (B), regional components. A—Partial melting of the three crustal segments–LC, CC and CV–is modeled for events at t 2 of 2.0, 0.8 and 0.6 Ga. The Nd isotopic diagram is according to the results shown in Table 5; symbols for crustal segments as in Figs. 6 and 7 for granitoids from the Pelotas Batholith. B—Compositions of the mantle sources for the two main groups of basic rocks with a Trans-Amazonian signature (UDS, ABT- and BP-ASU), estimation taken from the crystallization age in each case. Nd isotopic diagram according to the results shown in Table 6; symbols for Cretaceous and Paleoproterozoic, basic rocks as in Figs. 4 and 6, respectively. Dotted lines for the extrapolation of growth lines as schematized in Fig. 5. 370 M.C.P. Gastal et al. / Lithos 82 (2005) 345–377 Table 6 Deviations on e Nd(0) values and T DM(Nd) ages for the calculated mantle sources of basic rocks taken as representative of the lithospheric components with a Trans-Amazonian signature, southern Brazilian shield Geological units/samples Age (Ga) Magma composition e Nd(t) 147 Sm/144Nd Paleoproterozoic Uruguayan dyke swarm—UDS UR46, basaltic 1.73 2.03 0.1275 andesite UR33, basaltic 1.22 0.1292 andesite F f Sm/Ndm e Nd(0)m T DMm (Ga) 0.35 17.32 2.48 0.34 16.15 2.42 Cretaceous potassic alkalic province, Asunción Sapucaı́ graben, Paraguay Alkali basalt–trachyte suite—ABT-ASU 47-ps263, 0.127 16.86 0.1195 0.39 18.10 2.33 syenogabbro d159-ps9, 16.09 0.1203 0.39 17.32 2.29 trachybasalt Basanite–phonolite suite—BP-ASU 77-ps245, 0.127 12.32 0.0921 0.53 14.01 1.55 ijolite 56-ps268, 14.27 0.0925 0.53 15.96 1.68 Ne gabbro 0.15 0.11 0.06 a Sm/Nd 0.90 0.87 0.81 Mantle sources Deviations f Sm/Ndp e Nd(0)p T DMp (Ga) De Nd(0) DT DM (Ga) 0.28 14.19 2.63 +3.13 +0.15 0.27 12.98 2.57 +3.17 +0.15 0.30 17.81 2.85 +0.29 +0.52 0.30 17.03 2.81 +0.29 +0.52 0.42 13.66 1.86 +0.35 +0.31 0.42 15.61 2.02 +0.35 +0.34 F for melting degree; a Sm/Nd=[(D Nd*(1 F))+F]/[(D Sm*(1 F))+F], for non-modal batch melting; the values of F for Cretaceous potassic rocks are from Comin-Chiaramonti et al. (1997); other references as in Tables 4 and 5. be negligible (b0.5 e Nd-units) for the Cretaceous potassic rocks (BP- and ABT-ASU), but larger for T DM(Nd) ages (0.3–0.5 Ga). Therefore, these Cretaceous rocks provide good approximations of the Nd isotope composition of mantle sources, so that the variations in their e Nd(t) values seem to reflect processes that took place in mantle environments, reinforcing previous discussions. In the Paleoproterozoic UDS-basaltic andesites, a reverse relation is found with larger deviations of e Nd(0) values (~3) and smaller for T DM(Nd) ages (b0.15 Ga). If no other major fractionation process occurred, the Nd DMmodel ages of UDS-tholeiites best reflect the time of the extraction of the mantle source: 2.4–2.6 Ga. This result corroborates that the subduction signature in these tholeiites was acquired during the Neoarchaean– Paleoproterozoic orogenies. 8.2. Binary mixing of source materials We discard the possible effects of partial melting by considering the studied rocks as representative of the melts. In all situations, we assumed melting– mixing–crystallization as synchronous, and that no subsequent fractionation occurred. More prominent cases of binary mixing reported in the studied igneous suites, all include the BP-like mantle as one end-member and the other end-member has diversified origins: the Neoarchaean–Paleoproterozoic lower crust—LC, the early Brasiliano mantle wedge—IAB, and the UDS-like subduction-processed mantle, respectively. Since the BP-like endmember is more REE-enriched than the other components—UDS, LC and IAB, it strongly influences the isotopic composition of the mixed melts. Thus, small variations on e Nd and 147Sm/144Nd correspond to significant increments of the contaminant (Fig. 9A,B). This is more accentuated when the other component is the depleted and young early Neoproterozoic IAB-component (NdB/NdA~0.09 and f Sm/NdB/f Sm/NdA~0.3). For the two other contaminants, UDS and LC, isotopic and chemical contrasts are smaller (NdB/NdA~0.2 and f Sm/NdB/f Sm/NdA~0.6–0.8), resulting in regular variations of hybrid melts. The first case would explain the origin of some 605–580 Maold granitoids and volcanic rocks in the western foreland of the Dom Feliciano collisional orogeny, through the binary mixing of the BP-like mantle with M.C.P. Gastal et al. / Lithos 82 (2005) 345–377 A 10 B IAB-magma Contaminant 5 50 70 0 30 90 95 90 70 LC-melt Contaminant UDS-magma Contaminant 70 -10 DMM 50 BP-magma 80 εNd DMM 90 95 95 -5 371 -15 BP-magma -20 -25 -30 1 0.5 T (Ga) 1.5 2 2.5 0.5 1.5 1 Dom Feliciano Orogeny -0.1 C IAB Camboriú Orogeny D 10 W DMM 5 -0.2 MM MM 0 UDS-like mantle 95 -0.3 εNd -5 fSm/Nd -0.4 3 2.5 2 T (Ga) 90 LC 95 -10 80 90 80 -0.5 BP-like mantle -15 CV 70 70 MM - addition of 30% melt -20 50 -25 BP- ASU -0.6 -20 -15 -10 -5 εNd(575 Ma) 0 5 10 -30 0 0.5 1 1.5 2 2.5 3 T (Ga) Fig. 9. Nd isotopic diagrams shown the deviations on Sm–Nd system due to binary mixture of distinct mantle- and crust-derived magmas (A– C), and the effects of metasomatism on an UDS-like mantle (D). A to C—Binary mixing models in which the main end-member is the BP-like enriched mantle, and the contaminant includes respectively: (A) the early Brasiliano IAB and the Paleoproterozoic–Neoarchaean subduction processed UDS-like mantle. The first model explains the early magmatic association from the Dom Feliciano western foreland (605–580 Ma), mostly the Lavras do Sul Intrusive Complex, and the second model some Cretaceous potassic ASU rocks; and (B) the Neoarchaean– Paleoproterozoic lower crust—LC, whose results explain the late magmatic associations from the western foreland. In (A) and (B), dotted lines for increments of the contaminant. C—f Sm/Nd vs. e Nd(575 Ma) diagram illustrating the solutions that explain the contrasting sources for the twoage groups of igneous rocks from the Dom Feliciano western foreland, shown in (A) and (B); ticks for the proportion (%) of the contaminant. D—Metasomatism of the Paleoproterozoic–Neoarchaean subduction processed UDS-like mantle (as in Fig. 8B). Such process is modeled for events at 2.0 and 0.6 Ga through the addition of 30% of a melt, which was calculated through 0.2% melting from a garnet lherzolite with a DMisotopic initial composition (McKenzies and O’Nions, 1995). Mantle components as in Fig. 8; symbols for Cretaceous tholeiites as Fig. 6, Neoproterozoic rocks Fig. 7, and Fig. 3 for Proterozoic basic-to-intermediate dykes. 70–80% of the IAB component (Fig. 9A). The scattering of some samples including minettes seems also to be registering the more enriched nature of the subcontinental lithosphere in this region, as early discussed (Fig. 9C). The same type of mixing with 90–95% or higher proportion of the IAB component would resolve the origin of some Cretaceous low-Ti Paraná tholeiites (Fig. 9A). Otherwise, the 575–550 Ma-old igneous rocks in the western foreland can have derived through the mixing of 70 up to 95% of the Neoarchaean lower crust, LC, with the BP-like mantle (Fig. 9B,C). 372 M.C.P. Gastal et al. / Lithos 82 (2005) 345–377 8.3. Metasomatism of the mantle We evaluate the re-enrichment of a subcontinental lithosphere processed during the Neoarchaean subduction (UDS-like component), in an attempt to study the origin of basic rocks with a TransAmazonian signature. The effects are analysed for events occurred during the Trans-Amazonian and Brasiliano orogenies. From the assumed average composition of the UDS-mantle, we calculated the weighted fraction of melts or fluids added to obtain the BP-like mantle. Slab-derived fluids are from Tatsumi (2000), and the melts are derived through 0.2% melting from the garnet lherzolite (McKenzies and O’Nions, 1995), and for both we assumed a DM–I Nd. The slab-derived fluid is more fractionated (Sm/Nd of 0.187) and has higher Nd and Sm than the melt (Sm/Nd of 0.216), so 10 times more melt are required (30:3). Different Sm/Nd ratios of the added materials do not result in diversified effects on both T DM(Nd) ages and e Nd(0) values, so Fig. 9D displays alone the addition of melts. In addition, the metasomatizing agent whether OIB melt or slab fluid must be discriminated on the base of incompatibleelement ratios (Weaver, 1991). The results illustrate conclusions already advanced by others authors (de Hollanda et al., 2003). If the metasomatic event is relatively recent (just before crystallization) the present-day Nd isotope ratios are high, but when it occurs in old events a low 143Nd/144Nd may develop with time. So, metasomatic events occurred during the TransAmazonian orogenies would cause small deviations on e Nd(0) values (b0.5) and larger on T DM(Nd) ages (~0.5 Ga). During the ca. 0.6 Ga Dom Feliciano Orogeny, these events would promoted very large increases of e Nd(0) values (De Nd~13.5) and decreases of T DM(Nd) age (DT DM~1.7 Ga). In both cases, Nd DM-model ages of the mantle sources reflect the timing of the metasomatic event, particularly in cases of low Sm/Nd ratio of the added material and shorter residence time of the original mantle. However, T DM(Nd) ages of magmas derived from the enriched mantle will not always return the timing of these events due to the effect of partial melting. This will occur particularly when a long time elapsed between the melting and enrichment events, which could be the case of the Cretaceous potassic ASU rocks. The best resolution to produce the BP-like component would be that involving the re-enrichment through the addition of melts from an original UDS-like mantle during the 2.0 Ga Camboriú collisional orogeny (Fig. 9D). During the intraplate event, at 1.7–1.6 Ga, similar process approximates but does not totally resolve the mantle source for the Neoproterozoic minette dykes. These dykes have high e Nd(t) values requiring most added melts, or a younger event of metasomatism, or else the contribution of more juvenile materials (Fig. 9D). 9. Final considerations The combined assessment of the nature of crustal and mantle sources, and the timing of chemical modifications provide a reliable approach to study the geodynamic of the lithosphere beneath southern Brazil. Geochemical and isotope data for basic to intermediate rocks improve previous discussions about the composition of the subcontinental lithosphere. Likewise, the review of the effects on Sm–Nd isotopes due to major processes affecting the sources during the generation of the studied rocks revealed that they are important parameters to consider into petrogenesis. Igneous differentiation processes may cause significant deviations on Sm/Nd isotopic ratios, making more difficult a single and direct petrogenetic interpretation of Nd model ages and e Nd values. In spite of the simplicity and vulnerability of the adopted Nd isotope modeling, the results commonly substantiate the previous interpretations on e Nd-evolutionary patterns built for diversified lithologies, that is, basic rocks and granitoids with different ages. In some cases, the behaviour of trace elements also supports these results. The present review justifies future isotope, geochemical and geological integrated studies in this region, including a more varied spectrum of igneous rocks. Certainly, this will substantially improve the ideas here proposed. Multiple processes of metasomatism affected the lithospheric mantle in southern Brazilian and Uruguayan shields, resulting in zones with extreme isotope and chemical composition that are typical of cratons and adjacent orogens (O’Brien et al., 1995). Proterozoic and Cretaceous igneous rocks largely M.C.P. Gastal et al. / Lithos 82 (2005) 345–377 register at least two incompatible-element-enriched mantle components, despite some regional complexity. The dominant end-member, UDS-like mantle type, has a strong isotope signature of Neoarchaean– Paleoproterozoic subduction events that correspond to the major period of the crust formation in these shields. In the other end-member, BP-like mantle type, this previous signature was reduced during tectono-thermal events at the end of the 2.0 Ga Camboriú collisional orogeny through a new process of OIB-like enrichment. The Paleoproterozoic Uruguayan dyke swarm (UDS) best represents the first component, also sampled by the Paleoproterozoic calc-alkaline Tandil dykes, and probably by the Cretaceous low-Ti tholeiites from southern Paraná Province. This mantle type apparently was important in the generation of some 800 and 660 Ma-old granitoids from the Dom Feliciano Belt in southern Brazil. The Cretaceous BP-suite from the Eastern Paraguay Province best represents the re-enriched end-member, also registered in the 600–550 Ma Neoproterozoic igneous rocks formed at the end of the Dom Feliciano Orogeny. The studied Neoproterozoic rocks show little evidences of mantle enrichment events during the Brasiliano orogenies, but these events can have been important in source materials of Cretaceous rocks. Therefore, the bulk of data allow proposing that the major events of metasomatism in the subcontinental lithosphere beneath the region took place mainly during the Neoarchaean–Paleoproterozoic. This conclusion is distinct from the proposal of Comin-Chiaramonti et al. (1997, 1999) based on T DM(Nd) ages. These authors considered that the source materials of Cretaceous tholeiites and alkalic rocks resulted from two chemically distinct mantle metasomatic events occurred during the Neoproterozoic (1.1–0.5 Ga) and Mesoproterozoic (1.6–1.3 Ga). We interpret the differences between the two propositions based on the Nd isotope modelling. The T DM(Nd) ages of magmas not always return the timing of the metasomatic event of the source, particularly when a long time elapsed between the melting and enrichment events. This can be the case of some Cretaceous rocks, such as the potassic ASU rocks. Nonetheless, we discuss the metasomatism of the mantle in terms of addition of melts or fluids, commonly referred as OIB- and subduction-related events. Other processes can also promote similar 373 chemical and isotope signatures, such as the delamination of the subcontinental lithosphere into the deeper asthenospheric mantle (Zindler and Hart, 1986). Now, the enriched nature of the mantle can be due to eclogitic–granulitic subducted material or eclogite–granulite-derived melts (Hirshmann and Stolper, 1996; Cordery et al., 1997; Tatsumi, 2000). According to Iacumin et al. (2003), this type of process can explain the chemical signature of some enriched tholeiites in southern Brazil and Uruguay. During the 660–550 Ma Dom Feliciano collisional event, the magma genesis involved distinct mantle and crustal source materials, defining two main domains that experienced different geodynamic evolution: the eastern collisional belt and the western foreland. Both regions also had different evolution during the early Neoproterozoic, as reported by Babinski et al. (1996), with the reworking of old crustal segments in the east and the development of the juvenile magmatic arc in the west. The 660–550 Ma-old magmatic events in the collisional belt involved the mixture of two components with similar Nd isotopes, the 2.1–0.8 Ga recycled crust (CCsegment) and the Neoarchaean–Paleoproterozoic subduction-processed mantle (UDS-like mantle type). The diversified contribution of the REEenriched old-mantle (BP-like mantle type) marked the end of the collisional period in this belt, at 630– 580 Ma. This enriched BP-mantle type in turn appears to have been dominant in magma genesis of late Neoproterozoic igneous suites in the western foreland. Now, the mixing processes also involved the 900–700 Ma subduction lithosphere (IAB-segment) and the 2.55 Ga lower crust (LC-segment). The contribution of the CC-segment increased from the early (605–580 Ma) to the young (575–550 Ma) events, which can be due either to crustal thickening or to delamination of the lithosphere. The delamination of the lithosphere at the end of the 660–550 Ma collisional orogeny is a suitable model because we can explain the magma genesis through the same geodynamic processes in the whole southern Brazilian Shield. In the collisional belt, this process would have promoted the thinning of the lithosphere, resulting in regional heating and abundant production of granitic melts. Based on Nd isotopes, we conclude that most of Mesoproterozoic T DM(Nd) ages in the studied Neoproterozoic igneous rocks 374 M.C.P. Gastal et al. / Lithos 82 (2005) 345–377 result from binary mixing processes of diversified and old source materials (mantle and crust). Such processes are well registered in the western Neoproterozoic foreland, where they exemplify the prominent effect of a REE-enriched mantle with a long residence time. Here, the BP-like mantle endmember strongly controls the Nd isotopes of the binary mixtures either including the juvenile lithosphere (IAB) or the lower crust (LC). Another major conclusion is concerning the origin of the abundant, late Neoproterozoic granitoids with diversified geochemical affinities from the southern Brazilian Shield. Those with a single crustal derivation are limited to syn- to late-transcurrent peraluminous types. Post-tectonic, high silica, highly evolved calc-alkaline and alkaline metaluminous types also have a major crustal contribution. The same is valid for syn-tectonic high-K calc-alkaline granitoids in western foreland. However, in most cases, Nd isotopes require some type of mantle contribution in their genesis. Acknowledgments This study was financially supported by the Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa no Estado do Rio Grande do Sul (FAPERGS nos. 00/2366.3 and 03/ 0321-3) and PRONEX/CNPq. We are grateful to F. Chemale Jr.(UFRGS) and A. P. Viero (UFRGS), who provided some the unpublished isotopic data used here. Bernard Bonin and Arto Luttinen are thanked for the constructive comments and suggestions, which substantially improved the manuscript. We are also grateful to V.P. Ferreira, A.N. Sial and I. McReath for the opportunity to contribute to the special issue of this journal. 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