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Original Article |
1 British Geological Survey, Kingsley Dunham Centre, Nottingham NG12 5GG, UK (e-mail: dis@bgs.ac.uk)
2 NERC Isotope Geoscience Laboratory, Kingsley Dunham Centre, Nottingham NG12 5GG, UK
3 Manoir de Bodion, F-56930 Plumeliau, France
4 Office Mauritanien des Récherches Géologiques, BP 654, Siège Social, Nouakchott, Mauritania
The Reguibat Shield of north Mauritania comprises a western Archaean terrane dominated by gneisses and granitic rocks and an eastern Eburnean terrane largely made up of Palaeoproterozoic granitic and metasedimentary rocks. These were juxtaposed during the c. 2.12.0 Ga Eburnean Orogeny, which formed an approximately north-trending front contiguous with the Eburnean belt of the Leo Shield in equatorial West Africa. Geological surveying in the Sfariat region of the Reguibat Shield has shown that a metamorphosed Palaeoproterozoic continental margin succession has been intruded by and intercalated with synorogenic granitoids and transported SW onto the Archaean foreland during sinistral oblique collision preserved as strongly partitioned D1 shortening and D2 strike-slip-dominated transpression within the Sfariat Belt. This was subsequently affected by retrogressive dextral transcurrent deformation and the propagation of the en echelon Imarkene and Tmeimichat fault zones. Laser ablation and conventional thermal ionization mass spectrometry UPb geochronology were carried out on five samples of granitic rock and migmatitic gneiss from the region, which reveal that anatexis and sinistral transpression took place between c. 2117 and 2064 Ma. Timing and kinematics of the Eburnean event in the Reguibat Shield are similar to those for the Leo Shield, which underwent SW-directed sinistral transpression at this time.
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