C.
Uweinat-Kamil Inlier
(Jebel Uweinat, Jebel Kamil, Jebel Nazar, Jabal Arkenu)
Karmakar & Schenk (2015):
"The Uweinat-Kamil basement complex, in the central part of the East Sahara
Ghost Craton (ESGC) in NE Africa, is an unique inlier-outcrop in the craton
that contains rocks with Archean formation ages, and is hence a key to understanding
the ancient crustal evolution of the otherwise enigmatic and poorly known
ESGC. The craton is thought to have been decratonized during the Neoproterozoic
after thickening as a result of Pan-African collisional events along its margins.
Textural and compositional relationships preserved in the metapelitic
granulites from the Uweinat-Kamil inlier suggest a two-stage metamorphic evolution
of the rocks:
Stage I saw the growth of sapphirine + quartz + garnet 1 at ~10 kbar and ~1050�C,
from an initial assemblage containing kyanite, sillimanite � biotite, which
are now preserved only as inclusions in porphyroblastic garnet 1. This stage
was followed by near-isobaric cooling stabilizing the assemblage garnet 1 + sillimanite
1 � orthopyroxene 1 � sapphirine coexisting with melt.
Stage II saw the breakdown of this assemblage forming a variety of symplectite
assemblages (orthopyroxene 2 + cordierite or orthopyroxene 2 + cordierite + sapphirine � sillimanite
2 or cordierite + spinel) through near-isothermal decompression from ~9 kbar
to ~6 kbar at ultrahigh temperatures of 900�1000�C. This was followed by near-isobaric
cooling of the rocks to temperatures of 700�C at ~5.5�6 kbar, as evidenced
by the growth of garnet 2 and the formation of late-stage biotite, owing to
back-reaction of melt with residual garnet 1 and symplectite minerals.
The second stage of the evolution is also observed in the associated metabasic
granulites. Complete to partial replacement of garnet 1 porphyroblasts and
clinopyroxene by orthopyroxene + plagioclase + hornblende � spinel symplectites
represents a stage of near-isothermal decompression, whereas the growth of
garnet 2 around the symplectitic minerals represents a stage of isobaric cooling.
Texturally controlled in situ Th�U�total Pb monazite dating of the metapelitic
granulites reveals the polymetamorphic nature of the rocks.
Stage I occurred at ~2600 Ma, as indicated by monazite inclusions within garnet
1 porphyroblasts (coexisting with sapphirine + quartz), and represents a previously
unknown Neoarchean ultrahigh-temperature metamorphism.
Stage II occurred 700 Ma later at ~1900 Ma, as indicated by monazite grains
in the symplectites and matrix, and represents a previously uncharacterized
Paleoproterozoic ultrahigh-temperature isothermal decompression event.
No evidence of any metamorphism
during the Neoproterozoic has been found. In this context, it is possible
that the proposed decratonization occurred during a Paleoproterozoic decompression
event instead of in the Neoproterozoic. The Paleoproterozoic evolution of
the Uweinat�Kamil inlier is very similar to that described from other Paleoproterozoic
orogenies across the world."
Previous works
The earliest scientific geologic report on area, that already mentioned
the leptitic character of the basement along the slopes of the Jebel Uweinat
massif is that by Menchikoff (1927). His early study included major-element
analyses of 12 metamorphic and magmatic rocks. Mahrholz (1968) published
some radiometric age data from samples collected in the Uweinat region.
More information was supplied by Hunting Geology & Geophysics Ltd. (1974)
who conducted exploration work on behalf of the Libyan Government. Klerkx
and co-workers carried out fieldwork on the basement southeast of Jebel
Uweinat during the mid and late seventies. Klerkx & Deutsch (1977), Klerkx
(1980), Klerkx & Rundle (1976) improved the knowledge on this remote area
considerably, providing fundamental information on its crustal composition.
Based on petrography and Rb/Sr whole rock age data, Klerkx (1980) recognized
two major basement series: a) The granulitic Karkur Murr series at the
eastern and southeastern slopes of Jebel Uweinat. b) The migmatic Ain
Dua series, which crops out along the northern, western and southern margin
of the massif.
In addition to geochronologic work on basement rocks, Klerkx & Rundle
(1976) dated a number of magmatic rocks by the K/Ar method. Schandelmeier
et al. (1983) and Schandelmeier & Darbyshire (1984) investigated the eastern
extension of the area.
Finally are distinguished two basement formations by their lithofacies
and metamorphic history:
1) the high grade granulitic Granoblastite Formation
(Karkur Murr Series) as lower unit, overlain by
2) the clearly remobilized Anatexite Formation (Ain Dua Series):
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|
Isotopic age determination
for the basement complex of the Uweinat-Kamil inlier
|
Location
|
Rock type
|
Method
|
Age (Ma)
|
Reference
|
Jebel Kamil
|
Anorthositic
gneiss
|
U/Pb
|
2629 - 2063
|
Sultan et al.
1994
|
Anorthositic
gneiss
|
U/Pb
|
2141 - 1922
|
Sultan et al.
1994
|
Jebel Uweinat
(Wadi Wahesh)
|
Mylonite
|
RB/Sr, biotite
regression line
|
2637 (+/-393)
|
Cahen et al.,
Klerkx & Deutsch 1977
|
Jebel Uweinat
|
Granulitic
gneiss
|
RB/Sr, regression
line
|
2556 (+/-142)
|
Cahen et al.,
Klerkx & Deutsch 1977
|
Granulitic
gneiss
|
RB/Sr, model
ages
|
2919-2904
|
Cahen et al.,
Klerkx & Deutsch 1977
|
Granulitic
gneiss
|
Sm/Nd model
ages
|
3200 - 3000
|
Harris et al.
1984
|
Jebel Uweinat
(South of)
|
Migmatite biotite
gneiss
|
RB/Sr, isochron
|
1784 (+/-126)
|
Cahen et al.,
Klerkx & Deutsch 1977
|
Granodiorite
gneiss
|
K/Ar biotite
|
1878 (+/-64)
|
Hunting Geology
& Geophysics Ltd. 1974
|
"The Precambrian terranes of north east
Africa are still poorly known. It is generally believed that the oldest rocks
in the region are the charnockitic gneisses of the Uweinat massif, located
at the triple junction between Libya�Egypt�Sudan, because they have yielded
Rb�Sr ages around 2.6 Ga and Nd TDM model ages around 3.0�3.2 Ga. Here we
confirm that these rocks are indeed Archean with SHRIMP U�Pb zircon ages as
old as 3.0 Ga, but we also report older rocks to the east, in the neighboring
Gebel Kamil region. This area contains a metaigneous complex formed of tonalite�trondhjemite�granite
(TTG) and gabbro-diorite (GbD) gneisses with a whole-rock Sm�Nd isochron age
of 3.16 � 0.16 Ga, average Nd TCR of 3.17 � 0.04 Ga, and average ɛNd(3.2 Ga)
of 3.4 � 0.3. The oldest TTG gneisses, which are also the oldest rocks
found to date in north east Africa, contain large magmatic zircons with
SHRIMP U�Pb crystallization ages peaking at 3.22 � 0.04 Ga, closely matching
the Sm�Nd and the Nd TCR model ages. These ages are interpreted to represent
arc-magmas produced between 3.1 Ga and 3.3 Ga. Other TTGs have younger Archean
zircon ages that form a continuum between 3.1 Ga and 2.55 Ga, with three peaks
at around 2.97 Ga, 2.85 Ga, and 2.6�2.7 Ga; these rocks were apparently generated
from the older TTGs during repeated events of crustal recycling. The crust
was stable from 2.55 Ga to 2.0 Ga, when an intense thermal event generated
rims of variable thickness over the Archean zircons. Neither the reworking
from 3.1 Ga to 2.55 Ga, nor the metamorphism at 2.0 Ga involved the addition
of juvenile material to the crust of this area, which behaved as an almost
closed system from 3.1 Ga to 0.75 Ga, when the intrusion of Pan-African I-type
granitoids with a juvenile component began." (Bea et al. 2011)
1. Jebel Kamil
(loc 1)
|
Further detailed investigations
of the Basement in a limited area in the Jebel Kamil were made by
Mostafa F. M. Elkady within the scope of a dissertation and
published in 2003. Elkady has been in the Jebel Kamil for
a period of 10 months for fieldwork, and he made detailed petrographic
studies of different rock units to determine their compositional character
and the effect of deformation on each rock unit:
|
|
"The major rock assemblages of the Jebel
Uweinat-Jebel Kamil basement inlier were subdivided by Klerkx (1980) and Richter
(1986) on the basis of their rock types and metamorphic grade into three units
namely, the Granoblastite Formation, the Anatexite Formation and the Metasedimentary
Formation. The Granoblastite Formation (Karkur Murr series) consists mainly
of a group of pyroxene ganulites containing charnockitic, noritic, and diopsidic
gneisses and metaquartzites. The Anatexite Formation (Ain Dua series) is dominated
by migmatites interpreted as anatectic granulites and contains abundant supracrustal
intercalations. The Granoblastite Formation (Karkur Murr series) underwent
granulite facies metamorphism, high pressure-high temperature, while low pressure-high
temperature for the Anatexite Formation (Ain Dua series).
The intrusive rocks are among the most prominent features of the Jebel Uweinat
region. They intruded most of the basement in the study area. Based on the
general geologic setting, microscopic appearance and bulk composition, at
least three principal suites were recognized by Richter (1986), these are:
1- Grey-green, calc-alkaline granitoids
2- Red, alkaline granites (sensu strictu)
3- Porphyritic, calc-alkaline granitoids (Paleozoic intrusions)
The major style of the folding of the basement is tight to tight-isoclinal
folds. NNE to NE fold axis trends dominate, but locally they change to E-W.
Axial surfaces are frequently overturned to the east. The deformation of the
area occurred in the Early to Middle-Proterozoic, accompanied with and succeeded
by a regional anatectic event (Klerkx 1980, Cahen et al 1984).
The structural analysis of the area indicated that it was subjected to
major tectonic deformation including folding, overthrusting, shearing and
faulting. The tectonic evolution can be concluded as follows:
1- The formation of continental crust occurred of the study area 3200
to 3000 Ma ago (Harris et al. 1984).
2- Deposition of Banded Iron Formation in continental marginal basins.
The time of this deposition may be between 2900 and 1800 Ma in accordance
with the world-wide deposition of the BIF (Windley 1979).
3- In the time-span from 1974 Ma to 1800 Ma crustal thickening followed
by crustal thinning (D1), led to the pro-grade and subsequent retrograde metamorphism
in this period. In this period developed the anatexite bands in the deeper
units and the above-mentioned shear zones in the BIF.
4- Somewhat later, further crustal shortening (D2) occurred in north-south
direction by regional folds with E-W fold axes, associated with pure shear.
In this period the area was still subjected to retrograde metamorphism.
5-Continued crustal shortening due to forces from west-east direction
(D3) caused folding with NNE-SSW fold axes plunging to the north or south
directions with shallow angles. Continued folding processes caused a series
of reverse faults. This group of faults extends in the NNE-SSW direction with
dip angles between 25� and 65� to the NW. These types of faults are prevailing
in the area.
6- During the Pan-African times a series of granitic intrusions intruded
into the Anatexite Sequences and the BIF.
Rocks
1. Ultramafic-Mafic and Calc-Silicate Rocks
The ultramafic-mafic and calc-silicate rocks (UM) are exposed as spots or
bands beneath the Anatexite Sequence in some localities of the area, especially
in the southern part. These rocks represent less than 5% of the rock units
here. The rocks are grey to green, fine to medium-grained. In the southern
part of the area some bands trend NNW-SSE with 45�dip angle to the SW. These
bands consist mainly of forsterite and/or spinel marble, minor serpentinite
and high deformed, fine-grained gabbro-norite. To the southwest of
the present area, the exposures of the UM are represented by bands and spots
of highly deformed gabbroic rocks, serpentinite and talc-carbonate, grading
upward, and alternating with the melansome in the Anatexite Sequence.
These rocks show rusty brown, brownish green and greyish weathered surfaces
with brownish, white veinlets giving a characteristic mesh structure. In places,
these rocks contain black nodules of forsterite or spinel minerals. The contact
between the UM and the underlying BIF is tectonic. The tectonic contact is
a thrust, parallel with the main thrusts elsewhere in the investigated area.
Generally these rocks consist essentially of interlayered wherlite (olivine
+ clinopyroxene) and clinopyroxenite and gabbro. Olivine compositions are
quite forsteritic. The rocks are variably transformed into foliated metamorphic
equivalents (talc-tremolite serpentinite, talc-serpentine tremotitite, hornblendite,
amphibolite) characterized by pervasive metamorphic recrystallization under
amphibolite facies metamorphism. The presence of olivine and spinel in these
ultramafic-mafic rocks indicate that their parent rock was formed at a relatively
high temperature and high pressure, and originated in the upper mantle.
2. Anatexite Sequence
In the investigated area the Anatexite Sequence is usually found as isolated
exposures, consisting of leucosome and melanosome bands. The leucosome bands
with felsic components are buff grey to white, medium to coarse grained, and
composed mainly of quartz and alkali-feldspar. The melanosome bands of mafic
components are greyish green to dark green, fine to medium-grained, and are
composed mainly of amphibole and plagioclase. Both bands are arranged in layers
or schlieren and as patches.
A unique feature of the Anatexite Sequences is the replacement of a primary
prograde mineralogy by later retrograde mineral assemblages, or even more
than one.
The Anatexite Sequence covers about 30% of the outcrop surface in the investigated
area. The banding trends NNE-SSW and dips about 65� toward NW. The thickness
of the leucosome and melanosome bands varies between a few centimeters to
a few meters. Generally the leucosome bands show medium to coarse-grained
or pegmatitic textures, while the melanosome exhibits finer-grained texture.
The contact with the underlying ultramafic-mafic rocks is mostly a secondary,
transitional contact with an increase in the mafic minerals toward the gabbroic,
serpentinite and related rocks. The direct contact between the Anatexite Sequence
and the overlying BIF is very rarely observed. Tectonic contact between the
Anatexite Sequence and the lower part of the BIF indicate detachment thrust
fault, due to the early south-north maximum stress. The Anatexite Sequences
is overlain by metapelitic bands alternating with iron-rich and silica-rich
bands. This alternation contains a high amount of garnet and subordinate orthopyroxene
minerals (enstatite and hypersthene), and calcite.
The characteristic feature of the Anatexite Sequence is the predominance
of migmatic gneiss, i.e. diatexites, metatexites and metablastites. Whereas
the highly mobilized, medium-grained diatexites are of a homogeneous to nebulitic
texture, rarely showing foliation, metatexites and metablastites are well-foliated
and a two-phase nature - melanosome and leucosome - becomes obvious, arranged
in the form of layers or schlieren and patches.
These rocks exhibit seriate granoblastic or porphyroblastic and in places
equigranular textures, and are composed mainly of intermediate plagioclase,
orthopyroxene, hornblende, biotite, and chlorite with subordinate amounts
of quartz in the melanosome, and alkali-feldspar, quartz, orthopyroxene, biotite,
and chlorite in the leucosome. In general, plagioclase is idioblastic and
strongly saussuritisized. Later albite or albite-rich plagioclase is unaltered.
Antiperthite was occasionally formed.
Alkali-feldspar is variably shaped and appears as microcline, perthite or
mesoperthitic-chessboard-albite. The perthites tend to form megablasts. Two
types of quartz dominate in the leucosome, the older one is deformed and shows
large grains with wavy extinction, while the later phase one is fine grained
and recrystallized.
Quartz occurs as anhedral grains, which are stretched and display ribbon structure
and predominantly is rich in inclusions. Brownish-green biotite is the dominant
mafic component and shows replacement by intergrown, subparallel chlorite.
The chlorite, sphene and/or epidote are dominant in most samples. A similar
alteration may be seen in the subordinate green hornblende. Orthopyroxene
is represented by hypersthene which occurs as skeletal-shaped anhedral grains,
partially altered to talc and chlorite. Cordierite, if present, occurs as
anhedral grains or irregular porphyroblastic grains with numerous inclusions
of quartz.
3. The Banded Iron Formation (BIF)
The BIF represents about 30 % of the rock units cropping out in the investigated
area. The BIF is built up of accumulated clastics of psammitic and subordinate
pelitic character. The BIF bands are well-foliated and generally fine-grained.
The lower part of the BIF exhibits a frequently cataclastic metamorphism,
but some parts still show weak graded bedding. The BIF succession consists
of variegated bands with colours of yellow, red, brown, black and grey. The
iron-rich bands are composed of black magnetite and dark greyish brown and
red hematite alternating with quartz bands, whereas the silica-rich bands
consist mainly of quartz or chert and jaspilite.
Generally, the chert bands dominate in the upper parts of the BIF while the
quartz bands (metamorphosed chert bands) increase toward the base. Chert and
jaspilite bands occupy the top of the formation. The chert contains more hematite
and shows remnants of thin layering in contrast to the quartz rich bands in
the middle and lower part of the BIF succession. On the basis of their structural
position the BIF beds seem to be younging toward west. The iron oxides and
magnetic minerals in the BIF bands are distributed in different proportions.
The BIF differs from top to base as follows:
3.1 Meta-Cherts
The meta-chert is hard, extremely dense or fine-grained crystalline rocks
and shows alternations of microcrystalline quartz and relics of primary deposition.
The meta-chert is composed mainly of quartz, hematite and subordinate amounts
of opal and chalcedony. The crystalline silica bands are a few millimeters
in thickness, while the dense silica bands exhibit thicknesses ranging between
a few centimeters and more than one metre. These bands show colour variations
from the top to the base depending on the iron oxide content, which increases
from top to base. Consequently colours range from light yellow at the top
to yellow, red or brown at the base. In the field, the chert is exposed as
high ridges composed of well banded chert or large chert fragments with more
than 20 centimeters of diameter. Highly sheared and brecciated bands occur
mostly adjacent to shear zones are parallel with the banding and major thrusts
and show minor cleavage parallel to the major thrust surfaces. The thickness
of the chert bands ranges between 5 and 10 meters, extends for a few km in
NNE-SSW direction. In some places of the study area the chert bands alternate
with jaspilite bands. The quartz grains are sometimes stained with reddish
brown colour as an indicator for hematite minerals, giving rise to jasper,
a variety of chert associated with iron oxide ores and containing iron-oxide
impurities that give it various colours (here red or yellow to brown). The
chert bands show well developed bands in some exposures or highly brecciated
bands in others. The fragments have diameters from a few millimeters to more
than 70 centimeters. These fragments are welded with hematite and iron oxides.
This breccia represents a fault breccia. The chert bands have mostly low magnetic
susceptibility in comparison with the other BIF bands.
3.2. Well-Banded Iron-Silica Bands
The well banded iron-silica bands show a gradational boundary with the underlying
fuchsite bearing quartz bands over a few meters contact. In the lower part
of these bands the silica-rich bands dominate as a few meters thick, while
the iron rich bands are a few centimeter thick. In the upper part, however
the thickness of the iron-rich bands increases to few meters of magnetite-hematite
rich bands, while the silica rich bands are only a few centimeter thick.
Lower part of the iron-silica-rich bands often contains highly altered mylonite
zones due to an earlier shear zone. The upper parts of these bands alternate
by with overlying chert bands. The magnetite-hematite rich bands are interlayered
with brown to yellow chert bands. The thickness of the chert bands ranges
between a few centimeters, at the border with the magnetite-hematite rich
bands, to more than five meters toward the top of the BIF and exhibit a red
to yellow colour due to the increase in iron oxides.
All of BIF bands strike NNE parallel to the regional strike direction and
have dips ranging between 10� and 70� to the WNW. Most of the BIF bands are
separated by shear zones and mylonite bands, developed during the south-north
maximum stress.
Well-banded iron-silica bands often underlie the chert-jaspilite
bands and are composed primarily of magnetite-hematite-rich bands alternating
with quartz-rich bands. The magnetite-hematite-rich bands show alternation
with quartz bands. The thickness of quartz bands increases to the east and
the thickness of the iron rich bands decreases in that direction- This alternation
of magnetite-hematite-quartz bands is more than 50 meters thick. It is parallel
to the overlying chert bands, and the trend is 10�/70�.
The magnetite-hematite bands constitute hard rocks of very fine-grained iron-rich
greyish black bands. The mineral assemblage is mainly deformed quartz bands
alternating with iron-rich bands mainly composed of hematite, goethite and
magnetite. The magnetite is clearly observed to be the original iron mineral
together with hematite. Hematite, in general, is the predominant mineral.
Goethite occurs as secondary mineral after magnetite and hematite. Graphite
occurs in most of the BIF samples.
The graphite occurs as spots of varying sizes, aligned in the bands and might
have had a biogenic source. In places, it is found as cavity filling. At the
surface this appears as weathered cavities with high concentration of graphite.
These bands have a very high magnetic susceptibility due to the high amount
of magnetite, while in the quartz rich bands the magnetic susceptibility is
intermediate.
3.3. Fuchsite-Bearing Quartz Bands
Fuchsite bearing quartz bands have a thickness
of up to 100 meters. They alternate with deformed quartz bands. The fuchsite
bearing quartz bands are a light green and consist mainly of quartz, fuchsite
and iron oxide. The deformed quartz bands are a white to grey and consist
mainly of quartz with subordinate amounts of iron oxides. Generally, the bands
exhibit penetrative foliation parallel to the primary banding. The thicknesses
of the alternation between the fuchsite bearing quartz and the deformed quartz
bands range between 3 and 1 meters respectively. The quartz bands are overlain
by well banded iron-silica bands.
Fuchsite-bearing quartz bands often follow in the succession,
overlying the iron-silica rich bands, but are exposed mostly in the extreme
eastern parts of the study area.
Generally, these bands have the same trend as the BIF bands and occupy large
bands of up to 500 meters thick. They are white, grey, greenish grey or green
fine to medium-grained in primary bands, few centimeters thick. The fuchsite-bearing
quartz bands consist mainly of quartz, chlorite, fuchsite, altered feldspar
minerals, clay minerals, and minor iron oxide. In these bands a penetrative
foliation is parallel with the primary banding, and having the same trend
as the BIF bands, mostly with 15� N and dips 60� to the west.
3.4. Metapelitic Volcanosedimentary Bands Alternating
with Iron-Silica Bands
Metapelitic volcanosedimentary bands represent the base of the BIF sequence.
They alternate with iron-silica bands (BIF), and vary in thickness between
1 and 5 meters. They are fine to medium-grained, and white, brown and grey.
These bands have the same trend as the BIF bands (10�/60� west). Lithic tuff
bands, brownish grey to white and consist of very fine quartz and altered
feldspar dominate these bands. They are 3 meters thick in average and alternate
with quartz bands with thicknesses of up to 1 metre, BIF bands up to 0.5 metre
and sometimes thin lamina of meta-chert with a few centimeters thick.
The iron-silica rich bands differ in composition with the higher part of the
BIF sequence. They contain, sometimes, subordinate amounts of garnet, ortho-pyroxene,
amphiboles, highly altered feldspars, chlorite, and relatively much magnetite.
Graphite is rarely observed in these bands.
Within the BIF occasional mylonitic bands between 1 and 3 meters in thickness
can be traced. These bands show reddish white colour or greyish red colour.
Normally, they are fine- to very fine-grained, consisting mainly of crushed
(mylonitized) quartz with subordinate amounts of magnetite, hematite and secondary
goethite bands. The mylonitic bands are parallel to the BIF bands as well
as to the foliation, and represent shear zones within the BIF. They show quartz
porphyroclasts surrounded generally by foliated fine-grained groundmass of
quartz-magnetite rich bands, which show earlier folding, formed during earlier
deformations.
The bands in metapelite-volcanosedimentary rocks are generally parallel with
the main thrusts and the fold axial surfaces in the area. Often, zones of
fault breccia cut through the BIF bands. Some zones are welded by secondary
goethite. These fault breccias generally prevail at E-W trending wrench faults,
and can be considered as polyphase faults".
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Ultramafic and calc-silicate
rocks
|
UM: Calcite-dolomite
|
Anatexite rocks
|
(red)
granite ? |
Boundary |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
BIF: Quartz Bands
|
BIF: Metapelite Bands
|
BIF: With graphite |
BIF: Iron-Silica Bands
|
BIF: Meta-Cherts
|
BIF: Quartz Bands
?
|
2. Jebel Uweinat
(loc 2a, 2b, 2c, 2d)
"In the eastern and south-eastern vicinity
of the Jebel Uweinat
ring complex (Tertiary syenite) the basement is made up of gneissose granoblastites
and granulitic gneisses which probably extend as far as the western part of
the Jebel Kamil outcrop area. They were described in detail by Klerkx (1980).
Their microfabric is characterized by granoblastic to flaser textures where
quartz is always present in elongated to platy grains or in ribbon-like aggregates
subparallel to the foliation. The gneisses contain orthopyroxene, garnet and
biotite as common constituents and variable amounts of plagioclase and K-feldspar.
Anatectic rocks are exposed in the Karkur Talh (22�01' N/25�09' E), around
the northern slopes of Jebel Uweinat, and at the western and south-western
base of this mountain. Texturally and mineralogically the anatectic rocks
are comparable to similar anatectic rocks in the Jebel Kamil area.
Paragneisses are exposed around the southernmost part of the NW Sudan basement
outcrop area. They form a system of large scale folds trending NE-SW. The
rock suite embraces quartz-mica schists, biotite-hornblende-garnet gneisses
and hornblende gneisses. They show gneissose to flaser textures, some with
small-scale folding due to a second cleavage.
The schists contain abundant quartz but no feldspar; white mica, well aligned
along cleavage plains, is present and in one sample kyanite and some tourmaline
were observed. The gneisses contain microcline, perthite and smaller amounts
of plagioclase and quartz. Biotite, hornblende and garnet arc the mafic minerals."
No further scientific investigations have been carried out since 1980s.
Consequently, only a few photographic evidence are to be found of Basement
rocks. There are only photos of participants of trekking tours (including
the author).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Anatexite: Mouth of
Karkur Talh (Author)
|
Granulite gneiss ?:
Western branch of Karkur Talh (Andras Zboray)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Migmatite
?: SE Uweinat (Wadi Waddan site)
|
Granulite gneiss ?:
Wadi Wahesh (Andras Zboray)
|
BIF: Inside the Uweinat
granite-dome (Author)
|
BIF: loc unknown |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Gneiss ?:
Slop of southeastern Uweinat
|
Gneiss ?: Ain Zueia,
Ain Dua
|
Plagioclase Granoblatite (?): Nearby palm
grove of Karkur Murr (A.Zboray)
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4. Gilf Kebir
(loc 3a, 3b)
In the southern foreland of the Gilf Kebir plateau,
the author has documented two previously unknown locations with outcrops of
the basement.
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Southern foreland of
Gilf Kebir (near Aqaba passage)
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Southern
foreland of Gilf Kebir ("Eight
Bells")
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5. Jebel Nazar
(loc 4)
Further outcrops of Basement occur in the
southern Jebel Nazar, in an area with granitoide intrusions. "The Basement
is represented by metabasites, gneisses and BIF-sediments. Gneisses similar
to the paleosomatic gneisses of the Jebel Kamil complex occupy most parts
of the peneplain. Structural evidence gives the impression that at least some
of these gneisses have passed melting conditions. Besides these in-situ migmatites,
injection migmatites with raft textures have been found at the eastern foreland
of the peneplain. Intrusive granitoid rocks are of the same type as the reddish,
K-feldspar granites in the Jebel Kamil area."
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BIF: Meta-Cherts ?
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Granitoids (unclassified)
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6. Jabal Arkenu
(loc 5)
"Undifferentiated rocks of the craton occupy the central
and eastern part of the Jabal Arkenu area and include amphibolite, migmatite
(anatexite), quartzite, quartzofeldspathic gneisses, biotite gneisses, diorite
greisses, granitic gneisses, quartz-magnetite (BIF) and porphyroblastic granitoids.
These rocks are highly metamorphosed and have been subjected to faulting and
folding."
"To the north-east of the
Jabal Arkenu ring
complex there are obviously further outcrops of Basement ("Marble"). Photomicrographs
of a metabasite collected NE of Jabal Arkenu illustrate a paragenesis of epidote
and sericite. In addition, chlorite occurs as fracture fills. Paragenesis
of green amphibole (possibly actinolite), turbid plagioclase megacrysts and
alkali feldspar. Note that opaque minerals are also important; accounting
for up to 5% of the surface are of this slide. Composite crystal comprising
an orthopyroxene core and a reaction rim of green amphibole (possibly actinolite),
with evidence for additional overgrowth of epidote."
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Amphibolite
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NE of Jabal Arkenu:
"Marble"
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Thin section of a Metabasite
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Quartz-Magnetite (BIF)
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D. Intracratonic
Metasediments (of not sure explained age)
1. Area eastern of
Jebel Kissu
"The probably youngest and clearly bedded Metasedimentary Formation is
located in the Northern Sudan, eastern of Jebel Kissu. Richter (1986) noted
an "itabiritic sequence" of iron quartzite that crops out for several kilometers
in the area. It consists mainly of quartz bands alternating with bands of
hematite and goethite with relics of titanomagnetite. Bands of marble and
amphibolites are present and represent a minor proportion of the Metasedimentary
Formation. The Metasedimentary Formation is a low to medium grade supracrustal
sequences. The tectonic environment of these rocks is interpreted as an intracontinental
rift (Richter 1986).
The central and eastern part of this area is occupied by rocks of lower metamorphic
grade. At the central part fine-grained phyllites with the typical mica glance
on the cleavage planes occur. Eastwards they grade into metasiltstones which
are exposed in a flatly eroded plain of several square kilometers. Their colour
changes from white to yellow, violet and grey; small scale sedimentary layering
is preserved in these rocks. Quartz is the major constituent and minor minerals
are sericite, chlorite and biotite. Homogeneously distributed, submicroscopic
haematite , limonite and bituminous substances cause the variable colours.
In the southern part of the area quartz-mylonites and quartzites are common.
The stratiform beds have developed in some layers a fine-grained, granoblastic
texture with flattened components. Quartz shows undulatory extinction and
cataclasis as well. In other layers detrital quartz and minor feldspar and
sheet silicates are embedded in a cryptocrystalline matrix of quartz and ore.
Small scale alternation of ore and quartz layers can be seen; the latter is
frequently jaspilitic, thus it seems warrantable to refer to these rocks as
itabirites."
2. "Infra-Cambrian" metasediments
(Jabal Arkenu) (loc 6)
"A sedimentary succession of presumed Infracambrian
age crops out along the eastern side of Jabal Arkenu igneous ring complex.
These partly deformed rocks of the so-called "Arkenu Formation" are of low
metamorphic grade. The formation comprises slightly recrystallized, interbedded
sandstones, rare conglomerates and mudrocks. Sandstones are buff yellow, fine
grained and medium-bedded, often structureless and stacked in uninterrupted
units. Within these sandstones, sedimentary structures include both tabular
cross-beds and possible ripple cross-lamination. The mudrocks form thick accumulations,
and comprise maroon, lilac and dark grey silty shale. Subtle changes in grain
size between beds include variations in silt content, reflected in the weathering
pattern of the mudrocks where silty laminae stand proud of more clay-rich
horizons. A single conglomerate horizon was observed on the eastern side of
the exposure. The grain size of this conglomerate is variable with both pebbly
and granular clasts set within a sandstone matrix. Pebbles are well rounded
with a maroon coloration. In thin section, the pebbles are shown to be metamorphosed
quartz arenitic sandstones, comprising quartz grains with undulose extinction
and sutured contacts. By comparison, the sandy matrix of the conglomerate
shows some later quartz overgrowth, but sutured contacts are few."
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"Infra-Cambrian": Metasediments
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Ferruginous conglomerate
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Conglomerate |
Banded Marble
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E. Some important sources
The Pre-Cambrian in North Africa
H.M.E. Schürmann -- E.J. Brill, Leiden, 1974, ISBN 90 04 03694 6
Desert Landforms of Southwest Egypt
-- NASA-CR-3611 19830008725, (1981)
Chapter 7. Basement rocks of the Gilf-Uweinat area
by Ahmed Atif Dardir
Outline of the geology of magmatic
and metamorphic units between Gebel Uweinat and Bir Safsaf (SW Egypt/NW Sudan)
H. Schandelmeier, A. Richter & G. Franz -- Journal of African Earth
Sciences 1: 275-283, 1983 (PDF)
The Saharan Metacraton
M.G. Abdelsalam et al. -- Journal of African Earth Sciences 34(3):119-136,
2002 (PDF)
Structural Evolution in the Palaeoproterozoic
Basement (Banded Iron Formation and related Rocks) of SW Egypt
M.F. Mostafa Elkady -- Dissertation, University Heidelberg, 2003
http://archiv.ub.uni-heidelberg.de/volltextserver/3573/1/Structural_Evolution_of_SW_Egypt.pdf
Petrographische Kartierung von granulitfaziellen
Gestein im Jebel Uweinat Basement, SW Ägypten
Katharina Wulff -- Diplom-Arbeit, Universität Kiel, 2003 (abstract)
Field-based investigations of an
"Infracambrian" clastic succession in SE Libya and its bearing on the evolution
of the Al Kufrah Basin
D. Le Heron et al. -- Geological Society London Special Publications
326(1): 193-210, 2009 (PDF)
Upper mantle structure of the Saharan
Metacraton
M. G. Abdelsalam et al. -- Journal of African Earth Sciences 60: 328�336,
2011 (PDF)
SHRIMP dating and Nd isotope geology
of the Archean terranes of the Uweinat-Kamil inlier, Egypt�Sudan�Libya
F. Bea et al. -- ELSEVIER, Volume 189, Issues 3�4, September 2011,
Pages 328-346
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.precamres.2011.07.017
Neoarchean UHT Metamorphism and Paleoproterozoic
UHT Reworking at Uweinat in the East Sahara Ghost Craton, SW Egypt:
Evidence from Petrology and Texturally Controlled in situ Monazite Dating
Shreya Karmakar & Volker Schenk -- J. Petrology 56 (9): 1703-1742,
2015 (PDF)
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