Dating deposition and low-grade metamorphism by in situ U-Pb geochronology of titanite in the Paleoproterozoic Timeball Hill Formation, southern Africa

Titanite coexists with zircon in a felsic tuff in the Paleoproterozoic Timeball Hill Formation, southern Africa. Two generations of titanite are preserved: euhedral, brown crystals with apatite inclusions, and colorless, matrix-filling cement. The brown titanite has elevated U, Th and Fe, and low Al...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Rasmussen, Birger, Fletcher, Ian, Muhling, J.
Format: Journal Article
Published: Elsevier Science BV 2013
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/22987
Description
Summary:Titanite coexists with zircon in a felsic tuff in the Paleoproterozoic Timeball Hill Formation, southern Africa. Two generations of titanite are preserved: euhedral, brown crystals with apatite inclusions, and colorless, matrix-filling cement. The brown titanite has elevated U, Th and Fe, and low Al, consistent with a magmatic origin, whereas the colorless titanite has higher Al and F contents, suggestive of a metamorphic paragenesis. In situ SHRIMP geochronology of zircons extracted from a polished thin section of the tuff bed suffer from inheritance and Pb--loss and yield an imprecise date (2259 ± 35 Ma), whereas coexisting brown titanites give a weighted mean 207Pb/206Pb age of 2278 ± 7 Ma. This date is consistent with U--Pb zircon ages for tuffs in the same stratigraphic unit from a nearby drill-hole. The brown titanite is interpreted to be magmatic and to provide a reliable estimate for the age of deposition. In situ U--Pb dating of matrix-filling titanite cement from the same stratigraphic interval yields an age of 2145 ± 12 Ma, which corresponds with previous estimates for a low-grade tectonothermal event in southern Africa. Our results demonstrate that titanite is a versatile chronometer that can be used to constrain depositional ages, and those of low-grade metamorphism, thus increasing the number of sedimentary rocks that can be dated and elucidating the low-temperature geological history of depositional basins.