
Os granitóides brasilianos da faixa de dobramentos Paraguai, MS e MT
Author(s) -
Antônio Misson Godoy,
Amarildo Salina Ruiz,
Jefferson Cassu Manzano,
Larissa Marques Barbosa de Araújo-Ruiz
Publication year - 2007
Publication title -
geologia usp. série científica
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.237
H-Index - 21
eISSN - 2316-9095
pISSN - 1519-874X
DOI - 10.5327/z1519-874x2007000100003
Subject(s) - massif , geology , batholith , geochemistry , magmatism , continental collision , continental crust , facies , crust , collision zone , geomorphology , tectonics , paleontology , subduction , structural basin
The Brazilian Granitic Province from southeastern Mato Grosso do Sul and Mato Grosso region, central western Brazil, can be divided into two major groups and/or magmatic events related to the evolution of the Paraguay Fold Belt. The southern portion crops out in Mato Grosso do Sul State and is constituted by the Taboco, Rio Negro, Coxim and Sonora massifs forming NE-SW oriented, elongated small intrusions. The north portion crops out in Mato Grosso State and is constituted by the São Vicente, Araguaiana and Lajinha batholiths. Lithogeochemical aspects of the northern granites point to Type-I granites ranging from K calc-alkaline to high-K, peraluminous to metaluminous in composition, generated in an environment of continental collision and/or post- collision decompression. The southern granites are Type-I, from K calc-alkaline to high-K, peraluminous to subordinate metalummous, in a syn-collision continental arc environment with the exception of some pre-collisional facies from the Rio Negro Massif. The southern granites have less SiO 2 and K 2O, and are less differentiated and evolved than granites from the northern region. The four southern granites can be grouped into two subordinate sets with the degree of differentiation increasing from South (Taboco and Rio Negro) to North (Coxim and Sonora). The granitic rocks are characterized by a magmatism generated by melting of material from the lower crust which suggests that in this province the formation from non-cogenetic magmas with diversified compositions and distinct degrees of fractioning reaching more steady consolidated environments at the end of the collisional event in the southeastern Amazonian Craton