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Australian Journal of Earth Sciences
An International Geoscience Journal of the Geological Society of Australia
Volume 69, 2022 - Issue 8
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Research Article

Stratigraphy of the Agnew-Wiluna Greenstone Belt: review, synopsis and implications for the late Mesoarchean to Neoarchean geological evolution of the Yilgarn Craton

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Pages 1149-1176 | Received 18 Mar 2022, Accepted 28 Jun 2022, Published online: 07 Aug 2022
 

Abstract

Our ability to understand the geological evolution of Archean cratons is fundamentally dependent on stratigraphic reconstructions across greenstone belts. Here, we integrate published stratigraphic, geochemical and geochronological data to produce a revised stratigraphic model for the Agnew-Wiluna Greenstone Belt of the Yilgarn Craton. The Agnew-Wiluna Greenstone Belt records ca 130 m.y. of magmatism that occurred between ca 2820 and 2690 Ma and can be divided into three cycles. Cycle 1 is marked by ca 2820–2740 Ma mafic–ultramafic volcanic rock successions. Cycle 2 is associated with ca 2740–2720 Ma felsic volcanic rocks, associated fragmental deposits and contemporaneous mafic–ultramafic intrusions. Cycle 3 consists of ca 2720–2690 Ma mafic–ultramafic volcanic rock successions and co-magmatic intrusions. Exhumation and reworking of these continental rift basin successions after ca 2690 Ma resulted in two younger, additional, depositional cycles in the Agnew-Wiluna Greenstone Belt. Cycle 4 is associated with intermediate to felsic volcanoclastic rocks and epiclastic rocks erupted/deposited between ca 2690 and 2665 Ma. Cycle 5 is associated with the deposition of polymict conglomerates and sandstones in localised depocentres between ca 2665 and 2655 Ma. The stratigraphic scheme identified at the scale of the Agnew-Wiluna Greenstone Belt is the local expression of craton-wide tectono-thermal events. Our revised stratigraphic model for the Agnew-Wiluna Greenstone Belt and proposed correlations at the craton scale support a para-autochthonous model whereby crust from a proto-Yilgarn continental mass was extended/thinned, favouring the activation of translithospheric pathways associated with the ca 2720–2690 Ma Kalgoorlie Large Igneous Province. Inversion of this intra-cratonic rift basin after ca 2680 Ma led to the protracted activation of shear zones and multiple shifts in sedimentary depocentres. The widespread occurrence of previously unidentified fragments of ca 2820–2720 Ma substrate within the Kalgoorlie-Kurnalpi Rift has significant implications for craton-scale stratigraphic reconstructions and challenges existing terrane and domain boundaries.

    KEY POINTS

  1. We propose a revised, coherent and testable stratigraphic model for the Agnew-Wiluna Greenstone Belt of the Kalgoorlie Terrane.

  2. We compare our revised stratigraphic model for the Agnew-Wiluna Greenstone Belt with that of the Murchison and Southern Cross domains of the Youanmi Terrane in order to build a new space–time–integrated stratigraphic cross-section across the western half of the Yilgarn Craton.

  3. We demonstrate for the first time the existence of a magmatic continuum (i.e. no significant magmatic hiatus) between ca 2820 and 2690 Ma, providing the missing link between the geological record of the Youanmi Terrane and that of the Eastern Goldfields Superterrane.

Acknowledgements

Axel Hofmann is thanked for providing a constructive review of the manuscript prior to submission to AJES. Dr. Sarah Jones and an anonymous reviewer are thanked for their constructive comments and revisions, which helped improve the manuscript significantly.

Disclosure statement

The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper.

Data availability statement

The authors confirm that the data supporting the findings of this study are available within the article and its supplementary material.

Additional information

Funding

The authors acknowledge support from the Minerals Research Institute of Western Australian, Northern Star Resources Ltd, Gold Road Resources Ltd, BHP—Nickel West Pty Ltd, Evolution Mining Ltd, Gold Fields Australia Ltd and Bogada Gold Ltd under the MRIWA collaborative research project M0530 Yilgarn 2020. This study was also supported by the Hammond and Nisbet fellowship at the University of Western Australia.

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