CIG   05423
CENTRO DE INVESTIGACIONES GEOLOGICAS
Unidad Ejecutora - UE
congresos y reuniones científicas
Título:
New U/Pb and Nd data from Peñas Blancas Pluton, Northpatagonian Massif, Argentina
Autor/es:
VALERIA GARCÏA; SANTIAGO N. GONZÁLEZ; COLOMBO C.G. TASSINARI; KEI SATO; ANA M. SATO; PABLO D. GONZÁLEZ; RICARDO VARELA
Lugar:
Sao Paulo
Reunión:
Simposio; 9° South American Symposium on Isotope Geology; 2014
Resumen:
The Peñas Blancas pluton has been considered part of the Permian Pailemán Plutonic Complex and assigned to the Gondwanic magmatic cycle in the North Patagonian Massif of Río Negro province. This pluton is a NW-SE enlongated body with a curvature to the west in its southern section. Metasedimentary rocks of El Jagüelito Formation are the country rock, present through numerous enclaves and pendants, which may suggest a partial melt origin for the pluton. To the east, the El Jagüelito ductile-brittle shear zone separates it from the high-grade metamorphic rocks of Mina Gonzalito Complex. To the west it is covered by Jurassic volcanic rocks of Marifil Complex. The pluton is a two-mica bearing, strongly peraluminous S-type granite with A/CNK between 1.09 and 1.18. This intrusive body displays several facies, such as a coarse-grained one, characterized by the presence of K-feldspar crystals in porphyritic texture, and a fine-grained equigranular one. The western section of the pluton is foliated and grades into mylonites along two previously mapped ductile-shear zones. Slightly foliated, late-stage leucogranites with muscovite and garnet occur as small N-S dike intrusions. The isotopic analyses were carried out at Centro de Pesquisas Geocronológicas of São Paulo University. Five single zircon spots yield an Ordovician SHRIMP U-Pb crystallization age of 471.0 ± 2.8 Ma. This age is older than the Rb-Sr dates previously published for the same plutonic complex. The εNd(t) values are predominantly negative and range from -2.7 to -4.0, with TDM model ages between 1.42 and 1.52 Ga. This new result allows us to assign the Peñas Blancas pluton to the Famatinian magmatic cycle rather than the Gondwanic cycle in the North Patagonian Massif. It could be correlated to other Ordovician intrusive bodies from Punta Sierra Plutonic Complex.