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Precambrian Research 104 (2000) 175–186 www.elsevier.com/locate/precamres Upper crust of the Pilbara Craton, Australia; 3D geometry of a granite/greenstone terrain Peter Wellman * Australian Geological Sur6ey Organization, PO Box 378, Canberra ACT, Australia Received 14 September 1999; accepted 19 May 2000 Abstract The Pilbara Craton in Northwest Australia is a 600×550 km region of early-mid Archaean granite/greenstone terrain, dominated by granite domes, and in part covered by younger rocks. Gravity and magnetic anomalies are used to map the granite/greenstone surface under cover, and infer the depth extent of the granite/greenstone structures. A published seismic refraction interpretation gives a two layer crust for the Pilbara Craton, with the layers separated by a velocity gradient at about 14 km. Some magnetic anomalies have a 1000–3600 nT amplitude, a width at one-half amplitude of 9 km, and a strike length of \100 km. Their causative bodies have a top at 1–2 km, an average apparent susceptibility of 0.1–0.2 (SI), and importantly a base about 14 km. The magnetic material is thought to be a small proportion of banded iron formation within the greenstone belts. Gravity anomalies are interpreted to indicate that granite margins are generally steep, and many granites have a base at a similar level to one another. The shape of the gravity anomalies over the granite/greenstone boundaries, and the amplitude of the anomalies (up to 650 −2 mms ) together with the inferred granite/greenstone density contrast, are consistent with both the granites and greenstones extending to a depth of 14 km. The domes are therefore vertical cylinders extending to mid-crustal depths. The great depth of the greenstone belts is consistent with the domal structure being due to convective crustal overturn. The Pilbara Craton may be unusual, because greenstone belts elsewhere in the world have smaller amplitude −2 gravity anomalies (commonly 200–400 mms ), a shallower inferred base to the greenstone belt (generally B8 km), and the base of the greenstone belt is thought to be truncated. Crown Copyright © 2000 Published by Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved. Keywords: Upper crust; Gravity anomalies; Magnetic anomalies; Archaean; Greenstone belts; Batholiths 1. Introduction mainly Proterozoic basement of central Australia, and two large areas of Archaean in western Aus- Archaean rocks in Australia consist of scattered tralia — the Yilgarn and Pilbara Cratons. The exposures of generally Late Archaean within the Pilbara Craton, the subject of this paper, com- prises early-mid Archaean granite/greenstone rocks (basement), which are partly overlain by * Present address: 17 Warragamba Avenue, Duffy ACT cover rocks of the Late Archaean (Hamersley 2611, Australia. Basin) and Phanerozoic age. 0301-9268/00/$ - see front matter Crown Copyright © 2000 Published by Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved. PII: S0301-9268(00)00092-9 176 P. Wellman/Precambrian Research 104 (2000) 175–186 The granite/greenstone terrain of the Pilbara Australian Geological Survey Organisation Craton differs from other areas of Australian (AGSO) and Geological Survey of Western Aus- crust, in its relatively old age (ca. 3660–2800 Ma) tralia. Most modelling of gravity or magnetic data and in its structure, being mainly domal granitoid use complex models with many variables, and it is complexes 50–100 km diameter, with intervening generally unclear which parameters of the model synformal greenstone belts (Hickman, 1983). The are accurately determined and which parameters greenstone belts include a variety of sediments, have large errors because of their interrelationship intrusive rocks, and felsic, mafic and ultramafic with other parameters of the model. In this study, lavas, that are often of only greenschist metamor- simple ‘generic’ models are used, with few variable phic grade, and are coeval with episodes of gran- parameters, and the model defines the geometry ite emplacement. Most granitoid complexes of only the main features of the upper crust. consist of numerous intrusions of a range of The paper mainly discusses a zone across the compositions and ages, with the older intrusions northern half of the Pilbara Craton where granite/ strongly deformed and highly metamorphosed, greenstone terrain rocks are exposed or have thin and incorporating some greenstone belt material. cover, and are largely unweathered. In the east of The granitoid complexes comprise approximately this band the exposure of granite/greenstone ter- 60% of the craton. rain is more continuous, structures are better un- There are differences between the eastern and derstood, and gravity and magnetic anomalies are western parts of the Pilbara Craton (Hickman, larger; hence many of the ideas have been devel- 1999). From geological mapping, the eastern side oped, and most examples given, for these features has a well developed dome and syncline structure, in the east. The northern margin of the Pilbara ages of the granites and greenstones are mainly in Craton is concealed by thick sediments of the the range 3.51–2.9 Ga, and greenstone belts are in Northwest Shelf, and there is only poor quality the form of synclines containing multiple vol- gravity and magnetic data. The southern half of canic–sedimentary packages. The western and the Pilbara Craton is covered with thick sequences possibly northern sides have elongate granitoid of Late Archaean Hamersley Basin sedimentary complexes, the ages of the granites and green- and volcanic rocks, and because of this ‘cover’ it stones are mainly in the shorter range 3.27–2.9 is difficult to interpret the gravity and magnetic Ga, major west northwest shears are an important data in terms of granite/greenstone structure. part of the structure, many greenstone belts do not have the form of synclines, and some sections of belt have only one group of sediments. 2. Magnetic and gravity data Most previous studies of the geology of the Pilbara have mapped the geology at outcrop level, The magnetic interpretation was carried out on and have inferred structure above or below this a detailed composite magnetic anomaly grid level by extrapolation of the exposed geology. derived from 14 separate airborne surveys of the There has been only a limited use of gravity or Australian Geological Survey Organisation and magnetic anomalies to map the geology of the the Geological Survey of Western Australia. Most granite/greenstone surface under cover, or to con- of the area of granite/greenstone outcrop is cov- strain its 3D structure; in part this is due to the ered by five 1996 airborne surveys. Each survey regional nature of the available gravity and mag- collected high-resolution magnetic, gamma-ray netic data. spectrometric and altitude data, observed at 80 m This paper discusses the 3D geometry of the above the ground level, with a flight-line separa- main geological features of the Pilbara Craton tion of 400 m (Richardson, 1997). The remaining granite/greenstone terrain, using new and more land area is covered by 1984–1992 regional sur- detailed gravity and magnetic data. The magnetic veys with 1.5 km flight-line spacing. data were acquired in the North Pilbara Project of The gravity surveys have been compiled and the National Geoscience Mapping Accord by the integrated by the Gravity Section of AGSO. The P. Wellman/Precambrian Research 104 (2000) 175–186 177 anomalies are based mainly on three surveys — that commonly forms at the margins of crustal an AGSO shipborne survey with about 16 km blocks with different crustal history (Gibb and spacing over the northern marine part of the Thomas 1976; Wellman 1978, 1998). The gravity craton which unfortunately does not cover a 40 dipole is thought to be an expression of the low km wide strip seaward of the coast, an AGSO density, thin crust of the Pilbara Craton margin survey covering the whole land area on a grid relative to the higher density, thicker crust of the with 11 km spacing, and a Hamersley Iron Pty margin of the younger surrounding crustal blocks. Ltd survey which covered the southern part of the This is consistent with the interpretation of the land area, ona5kmgrid spacing. The land one seismic refraction profile across the southern gravity surveys used a helicopter for transport margin of the Pilbara Craton (Drummond, 1979), and barometers for altitude, so the Bouguer and seismic refraction work over similar struc- −2 anomaly accuracy is about 20 mms . tures elsewhere (Winardhi and Mereu, 1997). The geological and geophysical data for the Magnetic anomalies (Fig. 1b) generally reflect entire Pilbara are presented at 1:1.5 M scale in structure at the top of the granite/greenstone ter- atlas form in Blewett et al. (2000). rain and above — i.e. at shallow crustal levels. The lines in Fig. 1b mark the truncation of anomalies due to Early and Late Archaean struc- 3. Extent of the Pilbara Craton tures of the Pilbara Craton, by Proterozoic struc- tures parallel to, and outside, the craton margin. The full extent of the Early Archaean rocks of Early Archaean granite/greenstone domal struc- the Pilbara Craton is obscured by younger cover tures are truncated at the Northeast margin. rocks; its extent, therefore, is inferred from High-amplitude linear anomalies trending gener- geophysical anomalies, and the distribution of ally west, caused by the banded iron formation younger rocks. deposits of the Late Archaean Hamersley Basin, Anomalies due to upper crustal effects are which form Pilbara Craton cover rocks, are trun- partly obscured in the Bouguer anomaly maps cated at the Southwest margin. Immediately out- due to the isostatic effect of regional topography side the boundary in the Southwest, west, and increasing in altitude to the Southeast. This re- northwest is a string of elongate magnetic gional is largely removed when the anomalies are anomaly highs, in places 12 km wide and 1800 nT expressed as terrain corrected free air anomalies in amplitude, caused by relatively shallow bodies. (Faye anomalies) (Fig. 1a). The thick black line In the absence of other strong indications, these on the figure, marking a change in anomaly tex- anomalies have been taken to define the margin of ture and anomaly value, gives the extent of the the Pilbara Craton in the northwest. Earlier inter- Pilbara Craton interpreted from these gravity pretations (Wellman, 1978, 1998), put the north- anomalies. As this is based on gravity anomalies, west boundary about 50 km northwest on the this craton boundary is at the mean depth of the basis of the gravity anomalies. structures causing the anomalies — possibly 8–14 Determining the extent of the Pilbara Craton km. Within the defined ovoid shape, the gravity from geology is hindered by Phanerozoic rocks anomalies define irregularly-distributed oval lows; straddling the boundary, and the absence of ex- which are due to Early Archaean granite/green- posed granite/greenstone terrain near the likely stone domal structures within the Pilbara Craton. margin of the Pilbara Craton. The best estimate Outside the ovoid the anomalies are very elon- of the craton margin from geology is the extent of gate, parallel to the Craton margin, and are due the Late Archaean rocks of the Pilbara Craton to structures in Proterozoic blocks wrapping (Fig. 1c). around the Pilbara Craton. The boundary is a The estimates of the margin of the Pilbara prominent gravity gradient on all margins except Craton from mapped geology, gravity anomalies the northwest. This gradient is between a high and magnetic anomalies are roughly consistent and low anomaly — the dipole gravity anomaly (Fig. 1c). The Pilbara Craton is a discrete oval 178 P. Wellman/Precambrian Research 104 (2000) 175–186 area (600×550 km) with a characteristic texture the Pilbara Craton. The crustal structure from given by oval granites. It is surrounded by eight independent profiles are generally similar. younger crust with structures subparallel with the The average profile given in Fig. 2, has been margin. calculated by averaging the various depths and velocities. Differences between profiles in crustal velocities and crustal thicknesses were thought by 4. Crustal properties within the Pilbara Craton Drummond (1983) to be caused by the southward dip of the crust mantle boundary across the Pil- Drummond (1983) used the seismic refraction bara Craton. This dip is consistent with the in- method, and iron ore mine explosions, to deter- creased crustal loading by topography to the mine the seismic velocity structure of the crust of south, the mean altitude of the land surface being −2 Fig. 1. Pilbara Craton’s extent and regional anomalies. (a) Terrain corrected free air anomalies, with contour interval 200 mms . The thick continuous line traces the dipole gravity anomaly at the margin of the Pilbara Craton. (b) Magnetic anomalies with regional removed. The dashed line shows the extent of magnetic anomalies characteristic of the Pilbara Craton. (c) Surface geology. Extent of the outcropping granite/greenstone rock is shown in dark grey. The lines show estimates of the extent of the Pilbara Craton from gravity (thick continuous line), and magnetic anomalies (short dashed line).
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