Archean & Proterozoic Tectonics
REVIEW OF THE PRECAMBRIAN TIME SCALE
- ARCHEAN (3.96 TO 2.5 BY) & PROTEROZOIC
(2.5 TO 0.543 BY) EONS
- Proterozoic Eon subdivided into Early
(2.5-1.6 by), Middle (1.6-1 by), & Late
(1-0.543 by)
- RADIOMETRIC AGES ONLY - NO FOSSILS GENERALLY
UNTIL THE VERY LATEST PRECAMBRIAN & EXTENSIVE METAMORPHIC
& IGNEOUS TERRANES
PRE-ARCHEAN CRUSTAL EVOLUTION
- METEORITE BOMBARDMENT - May have formed EARLY CONTINENTAL
CRUST
- EARLY PLATE TECTONICS - MAFIC & ULTRAMAFIC
CRUST INITIALLY; LATER ANDESITIC & GRANITIC CRUST
GENERATED BY PARTIAL MELTING OF MAFIC/ULTRAMAFIC PRECURSORS
AT SUBDUCTION ZONES AND AT MANTLE HOTSPOTS (LIKE ICELAND)
- WEATHERING TO FORM FELSIC SEDIMENTS
PRECAMBRIAN SHIELD
- CORES OF CONTINENTS
- broadly upwarped; geologically stable;
extend under Phanerozoic cover rocks
- CONSIST OF SMALLER ARCHEAN CRATONS WELDED TOGETHER
& SURROUNDED BY PROTEROZOIC MOUNTAIN BELTS (OROGENS)
- Canadian Shield - Wyoming, Superior,
Nain, Hearne, Rae &
Slave provinces (Archean cratons); Trans-Hudson
& Wopmay provinces (Early Proterozoic orogens
>1.8 by); Yavapai-Mazatzal & Central Plains provinces
(Early Proterozoic orogens < 1.8 by); and Grenville
province (Middle Proterozoic orogen)(see p. 332, Figure 12-16)
ARCHEAN CRATONS
- THESE CONTAIN THE OLDEST PRESERVED CRUST & ARE
A RECORD OF THE EARLIEST TECTONIC PATTERN
- TWO TYPES OF ROCKS:
- 1. Granite-Gneiss - represent the primitive
continents & is both older & younger than the
greenstone belt rocks
- 2. Greenstone Belts - represent the primitive
oceans
- GREENSTONE BELTS CONTAIN UNUSUAL ROCKS ->ULTRAMAFIC
VOLCANICS
- result from total melting of UPPER mantle [higher
temperatures] & are found only in the Archean
- the remainder of sequence resulted from partial
melting of mantle + differentiation of magma + erosion
of older crustal rocks
- Quartzite & carbonate rocks are generally
absent, as well
- NO CONTINENTAL SHELVES - SEDIMENTS ARE GRAYWACKES DEPOSITED
IN DEEP-MARINE ENVIRONMENT OF DEPOSITION (see next section)
- ARCHEAN CRATONS PROBABLY FORMED BY COLLISION OF GRANITE-GNEISS
MICRO-CONTINENTS WITH PIECES OF PRIMITIVE GREENSTONE OCEANS
WERE TRAPPED ALONG SUTURES
- ARCHEAN PLATE TECTONICS WAS CHARACTERIZED BY INTENSE
MANTLE CONVECTION, RESULTING IN SMALLER CONVECTION CELLS
& SMALLER "PLATES" OF THINNER LITHOSPHERE
- CULMINATES WITH CONTINENTAL CRUST BEING CONSOLIDATED
INTO LARGE STABLE CRATONS
- North America & Northern Europe
= Laurentia; South America & Africa = West
Gondwana; & Antarctica, Australia, India & parts
of Asia = East Gondwana
PROTEROZOIC MOBILE BELTS
- THREE MAJOR TYPES OF ROCKS:
- 1. Widespread Shallow-marine Quartzite-Carbonate-Shale
Assemblages
- REPRESENT DEPOSITION ON & AT PASSIVE CONTINENTAL MARGINS
OF WIDESPREAD STABLE CRATONS
- 2. Tillites/Diamictites (pebbly mudstones)
- REPRESENT TWO (2) EPISODES OF CONTINENTAL
GLACIATION
- Early Proterozoic (2300 my ago) - Bruce & Gowganda
sequences in North America; numerous localities elsewhere
- Late Proterozoic (850-600 my ago) - 4 ice ages - the
last = Varangian is global, even affecting continents along the
equator!
- Continental glaciation also in the Ordovician-Silurian, Pennsylvanian-Permian,
& Cenozoic
- 3. Iron Ores
- RECORD CHANGING OXYGEN CONTENT OF ATMOSPHERE
- Atmospheric oxygen content is a balance between
sources & sinks
- main source of oxygen is photosynthetic organisms,
which developed in the Archean [~3.5 by ago ]
- main sink for oxygen during the Archean
& Earliest Proterozoic was previously dissolved iron
(Fe+2 )
- main sink for oxygen after the Latest
Early Proterozoic (from ~2000 my ago to the present
) has been weathering of iron-rich rocks
- Latest Archean/Earliest Proterozoic - Banded Iron
Formations (BIFs) [iron oxide & chert] {mostly (92%)
Earliest Proterozoic}
- Archean & Earliest Proterozoic oxygen combined
with previously dissolved iron (Fe+2)
to form BIFs & did NOT accumulate in the atmosphere
- By the end of Early Proterozoic time, the iron
sink was used up & free oxygen began to
accumulate in the atmosphere
- Latest Early Proterozoic to the present (after
1800 my) - Redbeds
- Redbeds result from hematite produced during
weathering of iron-rich rocks in an oxidizing atmosphere
- 4. Note: Proterozoic greenstone belts
do occur, but without ultramafic volcanics
PROTEROZOIC CRUSTAL EVOLUTION
- DOMINATED BY WILSON CYCLES (rifting of "supercontinents"
into smaller fragments followed by dispersal, & subsequent
consolidation of continental crust into "supercontinents")
- Represented by well preserved rift strata in fault
basins, overlain by passive continental margin sediments,
& culminating in active continental margin sediments,
often containing slivers of ocean crust (ophiolites)
- Wopmay Orogen (1.9-1.8 by [EARLY PROTEROZOIC])
= oldest completely preserved Wilson Cycle
- WEST SIDE OF SLAVE PROVINCE RIFTED OFF, THEN SUTURED BACK
- Other Early Proterozoic orogens >1.8 by also
indicate rifting & subsequent suturing along the margins
of the Archean provinces in the Canadian Shield
- Early Proterozoic orogens <1.8 by = series
of exotic terranes (island arcs) sutured
to North America - probably developed in large ocean
basin formed following the Early Proterozoic consolidation of
Laurentia 1.8 by ago
- GRENVILLE OROGEN (1.3-1.0 BY [MIDDLE PROTEROZOIC])
= COLLISION OF LAURENTIA WITH WEST GONDWANA
- Midcontinent rift contemporaneous
- LATE PROTEROZOIC/PALEOZOIC
- eastern & western North America rifted
- GEOMETRY OF THE LATE PROTEROZOIC CONTINENTAL MARGIN AFFECTED
THE STRUCTURES IN PHANEROZOIC MOUNTAIN BELTS DEVELOPED LATER
- CULMINATED IN APPALACHIAN & EARLY ROCKY MOUNTAIN OROGENS
SUMMARY OF PRECAMBRIAN CRUSTAL EVOLUTION & TECTONIC PATTERNS
- THE EARTH'S SURFACE IS EXTREMELY MOBILE = PLATE
TECTONICS
- PLATE SIZE GETS LARGER THROUGH TIME -> CONVECTION
INTENSITY DECREASES THROUGH TIME AS THE SUPPLY OF HEAT
DECREASES & THE EARTH COOLS
- ARCHEAN "continents"
- 100-500 km in width
- Proterozoic continents - 1000-2000 km
in width
- Phanerozoic continents - 5000-10000
km in width
Study Questions
1. What are the general characteristics of Precambrian shields?
2. What are the general characteristics of Archean cratons?
3. What is the significance of the 2 types of rocks occurring
in Archean cratons?
4. What is the significance & uniqueness of the ultramafic
volcanics in Archean greenstone belts?
5. What is the significance of the general absence of shallow-marine
quartzite & carbonate rocks?
6. What are the general characteristics of Archean tectonics
(the nature of plate tectonics in the Archean in terms of convection
rates & thickness of lithosphere)?
7. What is the mechanism by which Archean cratons were formed?
8. What are the different types of rocks contained in Proterozoic
Mobile Belts?
9. What is the significance of Proterozoic quartzite-carbonate-shale
assemblages in terms of lithospheric thickness?
10. What is the significance of tillites in terms of changes
in Earth's climate?
11. What is the significance of BIF's & redbeds in terms
of changes in the composition of Earth's atmosphere?
12. What is the primary cause for changes in Earth's atmosphere
during the Cryptozoic?
13. What are the differences between Proterozoic & Archean
crustal evolution & tectonics?
14. When and what region were affected by North American Proterozoic
Wilson Cycles & tectonic events?
15. What was the cause of the changing tectonic scale from
the Archean to the Phanerozoic?