The composite net-veined diorite intrusives of the Julianehåb district, South Greenland

Authors

  • B. F. Windley

Abstract

Net-veined diorite intrusive are described from a plutonic environment of Precambrian granites in the Julianehåb district of S. Greenland. They are composite, minor intrusions consisting of a central diorite flanked by margins of aplitic granodiorite and they are characterised by the presence of pillow-shaped diorite blocks form ed by granitic net-veins penetrating from the margins into the central diorite. The net-veins have not chilled the diorite, but along a few there are coarser grained margins in the diorite in which biotite, sphene and orthite have recrystallised.

A contraction crack - shear plane theory is proposed to explain the formation of the net-veins. The granite material was introduced along the walls of the bodies from where it penetrated inwards through a network of contraction cracks. It was also introduced through the central parts of bodies along a set of parallel sheet fractures formed by shearing and compression of the diorite.

The granitic material was produced by rheomorphism-at-depth from the recently reactivated granites of the Julianehåb district; it followed its basic parent to higher levels, where it penetrated the diorite at least partly by a process of recrystallisation and replacement.

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Published

1965-07-10

How to Cite

Windley, B. F. (1965). The composite net-veined diorite intrusives of the Julianehåb district, South Greenland. Meddelelser Om Grønland, 172(8), 1–60. Retrieved from https://tidsskrift.dk/meddrgroenland/article/view/158784