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Precambrian Research 117 (2002) 21 – 40 www.elsevier.com/locate/precamres Proterozoic tectonism of the Arabian Shield A. Genna a,*, P. Nehlig a, E. Le Goff a, C. Guerrot a, M. Shanti b a BRGM, 3, A!enue C. Guillemin, BP 6009, 45060 Orleans Cedex 2, France b Saudi Geological Sur!ey, P.O. Box 1492, Jeddah 21431, Saudi Arabia Received 23 May 2000; accepted 2 May 2002 Abstract New field and analytical work, together with a new aeromagnetic map and a geologic, structural, geochemical, and geochronologic synthesis and reappraisal, offer a new view of the anatomy and geologic history of the Arabian Shield. Although Early Proterozoic rocks have been found in the eastern part of the Shield, the main geologic evolution of the Shield is limited to a period ranging from 900 to 530 Ma that led to the formation, amalgamation, and final cratonization of several tectonostratigraphic terranes. The pre-Panafrican structures ( !690 Ma), which are difficult to decipher due to younger deformation, were essentially the result of the formation, amalgamation, and accretion of these terranes. The Panafrican tectonism (690–590 Ma) was marked by the formation of the Nabitah Belt and peripheral ranges punctuated by gneiss domes. Various sedimentary formations contemporaneous with this tectonism represent foreland or intracontinental molasse basins. After the Panafrican tectonism, widespread extension (590–530 Ma) brought about crustal thinning that generated bimodal magmatism and significant dike swarms; associated volcanics form the Shammar group. A marine transgression, associated with passive-margin-type structures with tilted blocks, marked the end of the thinning. The platform facies produced by this transgression correspond to part of the Jibalah Formation. Other basins formed as deep continental pull-apart basins along transform faults. This updated view of the Arabian Proterozoic geodynamic evolution provides a framework for reviewing the associated mineralizing events, and places them in a new chronology and structural history. © 2002 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved. Keywords: Tectonism; Proterozoic; Saudi Arabia; Panafrican orogeny; Arabian– Nubian Shield 1. Introduction The present structure of the Arabian Shield (Fig. 1) is the result of diverse and polyphase geodynamic events. The first overview of the geology of this region was provided by Karpoff (1958), who classified the Proterozoic rocks of * Corresponding author. Tel.: +33-2-38-64-38-96 E-mail address: [email protected] (A. Genna). Saudi Arabia into two distinct series: an older Medina series, showing highly variable grades of metamorphism and cut by intrusives, predating the discordantly overlying Wadi Fatima series. No general structural arrangement for the Shield was proposed at that time. The Najd Fault system was the subject of the first tectonic syntheses of the Proterozoic basement (Moore, 1979; Delfour, 1979a, 1980a). Delfour (1979a) considered the Najd orogenic cy- 0301-9268/02/$ - see front matter © 2002 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved. PII: S 0 3 0 1 - 9 2 6 8 ( 0 2 ) 0 0 0 6 1 - X 22 A. Genna et al. / Precambrian Research 117 (2002) 21–40 cle of the Arabian Shield to comprise four structural phases between 800 and 500 Ma. The main phase, dated at 550 Ma and ending in cratonization of the Shield, corresponded to the peak of the Panafrican orogeny. This idea was followed up by Caby (1982), who compared the geodynamics of the Arabian Shield to those of the Tuareg Shield, and considered the tectonic structures of Arabia to Fig. 1. Geologic map of the Arabian Shield. A. Genna et al. / Precambrian Research 117 (2002) 21–40 be similar to Andean-type cordilleras. Ophiolite complexes were recognized by Shanti and Roobol (1979). More recently, Kröner (1985) considered the Arabian Proterozoic basement in terms of an assemblage of microplates bounded by sutures that are locally associated with ophiolite formations. This model was developed for the whole of the Arabian –Nubian Shield by Bentor (1985). Stoesser and Camp (1985) compiled a tentative map of these boundaries and their associated orogenic zones for the Arabian Peninsula, and Vail (1985) extended this map to cover the entire Arabian–Nubian Shield. Along these same lines, Laval and Le Bel (1986) developed a model for the Al Amar Belt and the Abt Schist, involving subduction and collision of volcanic arcs. In order to clarify the relationships between mineralization (gold and base metals) and structure, Bokhari and Forster (1988) suggested a more complex tectonic evolution. They proposed the existence of a prePanafrican oceanic crust (!950 Ma) followed, from 950 to 720 Ma in a pre-cratonic context, by the development of volcanic arcs in a marine environment; the latter period was characterized by tholeiitic plutonism followed by calc-alkaline plutonism. Cratonization occurred through accretion of microplates (720–640 Ma). Still according to Bokhari and Forster (1988), Arabian –Nubian cratonization was followed by tectonic extension (700– 540 Ma) and marked by andesitic volcanism leading to molasse sedimentation. They established a parallel with the Tertiary extension of the Basin and Range province in the USA. Quick (1991) expanded Kröner’s (1985) model; he considered the Nabitah Belt to be the main structure in an assemblage of terranes and proposed extending the model eastward, where he interpreted the Abt Schist and part of the Murdama formations as an accretionary wedge and fore-arc basin associated with west-plunging subduction. Windley et al. (1996) identified the southern extension of the Nabitah Belt in Yemen, where it lies within a succession of arcs and terranes that correlate with those in Arabia and the Mozambique Belt. 23 Al-Saleh et al. (1998) held that the eastern part of the Arabian Shield was subjected to two major orogenic events, 680 and 600 Ma old, based on a metamorphic study and Ar40/Ar39 dating. Lescuyer et al. (1994) described a rightlateral ductile fault in the western part of the Shield, which they attribute to a cratonization phase. Numerous radiometric age determinations are available for rocks and minerals of the Shield. Johnson et al. (1993) made a first comprehensive review of these data, and stratigraphic conclusions were drawn later (Johnson, 1996). The Proterozoic sedimentary formations of the Arabian Shield have been the subject of many studies and classifications (Jackson and Ramsay, 1980; Delfour, 1980a). Hadley and Schmidt (1980) separated them into three depositional phases; a first phase composed only of volcanic formations and containing no plutons; a second phase consisting of sandstone, polygenetic conglomerate, meta-greywacke and marble; and a third phase of terrigeneous and siliciclastic formations, as well as stromatolitic limestone and dolomite. Phase 1 is represented by the Baish, Baha and Jiddah groups, Phase 2 by the Ablah, Halaban and Murdama groups, and Phase 3 by the Shammar and Jubaylah groups. In the context of mineral exploration, numerous gold and base-metal prospects have been the subject of detailed structural analysis (Sahl, 1993; Koch-Mathian et al., 1994; Genna, 1996; Récoché et al., 1998a,b). Two mapping and structural syntheses have been completed on the Bidah and Shwas volcano-sedimentary belts (Donzeau and Béziat, 1989; Béziat and Donzeau, 1989), and a composite metallogenic map was compiled by Béziat and Bache (1995). These studies also show local structural evolutions, which are addressed here. In general, the previous studies dealt primarily with the ancient pre-Panafrican structures, and paid little attention to more recent geodynamic events, contemporary with or later than the formation of the Nabitah Belt. Our study focuses on these later events. Fig. 2 summarizes the main stages of the Shield’s structural development, as established from our results. 24 A. Genna et al. / Precambrian Research 117 (2002) 21–40 Fig. 2. Chronology of tectonic events in the Arabian Shield, relationships with the main types of structures. 2. Pre-Panafrican events (!690 Ma) very thick turbidite succession (Delfour, 1979b; Delfour et al., 1982). The rocks are more distal and siliciclastic than the schist in other basins, which is commonly composed of tuff and cinerite. This difference led some authors to interpret the Abt Schist as a product of accretionary wedges (Laval and Le Bel, 1986). Volcanic arcs and ophiolitic assemblages typical of a subduction context indicate that convergence occurred in an oceanic environment (Camp, 1984; Laval and Le Bel, 1986; Pallister et al., 1987). However, few kinematic elements are known for this first period, and they cannot be extrapolated to the scale of the whole Shield. The earliest faults of regional importance seem to be younger than the basins, and are probably indicative of an ocean-closure mechanism. 2.1. Basins exhibiting marine affinity Before formation of the Panafrican Belt, Saudi Arabia was an area of mostly volcano-sedimentary formations (Fig. 1) deposited in an oceanic or marginal marine environment associated with subduction zones, and intruded by granite and diorite. These are represented by various groups, the main ones being the Al Ays, Abt, Halaban, Jiddah, Bahah, Baish, and Hali groups. Several authors (e.g. Hadley and Schmidt, 1980; Jackson and Ramsay, 1980; Delfour, 1980a) proposed classifications that assume two or three major tectonic events during this first long period. The basement underlying these early sedimentary formations is either poorly or not at all defined. Stacey and Hedge (1984) called it Early Proterozoic, but other authors merely considered it as an ‘older basement’ of gneiss and migmatite or ophiolites (e.g. Delfour, 1980a; Jackson and Ramsay, 1980). The pre-Panafrican formations were subjected to highly varied degrees of deformation before deposition of the Panafrican molasse. For example, the Al Ays Formation in the northwest (Kemp, 1981) was not deformed, whereas the Jiddah Formation in the south was intensely foliated before the Panafrican Basin molasse was deposited. Among the Panafrican Basin deposits, the Abt Schist constitutes a unit that is exceptional for its 2.2. Closure of the oceanic domain ( " 690 Ma) The pre-cratonic elements were brought together during a collision that occurred about 690 Ma ago (Johnson, 1996; Fig. 3). The ocean-closure mechanisms are still poorly understood, but Fig. 3. The Shield divided into terranes according to Johnson (1998). A. Genna et al. / Precambrian Research 117 (2002) 21–40 25 same family. Overall, we can recognize two types of major fault: the first demarcate large blocks and correspond to major sutures; the second are faults that developed within a tectonic block, like those in the Al Amar Belt, and are accompanied by folds with vertical axes (Ad Dafinah Fault), boudin shaped quartz veins (Nabitah Fault), or tension gashes that are variably boudinaged (Abt Schist). This first deformation was also accompanied by a remobilization of sulphide mineralization along shear zones in the Al Amar Belt, as seen in the Khnaiguiyah prospect; structural analysis of this prospect provides an example of the elementary kinematics operating in these shear zones (Fig. 5). Fig. 4. Structural pattern of the currently recognized major faults attributable to the collisional phase in the Arabian Shield. (a) Chronology of the elementary deformation: the first phase 1 – corresponds to vertical stretching, the second 2 – corresponds to dextral strike-slip. the resultant sutures are marked by ophiolite formations such as Jabal Ess (Shanti and Roobol, 1979), or by ultramafic rocks that are not clearly defined as ophiolitic. Close analysis of these sutures has provided a few keys to understanding the phenomenon. The first deformation to affect the basin sedimentary series was characterized by a very steeply plunging lineation concentrated in kilometre- to multi-kilometre-wide corridors whose regional extent is not everywhere clearly defined (Fig. 4). Several faults are attributable to this deformation phase, such as the Ad Dafinah Fault, the fault bounding the Abt Schist to the east, the Nabitah Fault, and various transverse faults in the Al Amar Belt; many other shear zones that are visible on satellite photos probably belong to the Fig. 5. The Khnaiguiyah prospect (Cu, Zn). (a) Location; (b) General structural setting of the study zone, showing the mineralized zone and foliation traces; (c) Stereographic projection of the stretching lineation (Schmidt, lower hemisphere); (d) Kinematic interpretation. 26 A. Genna et al. / Precambrian Research 117 (2002) 21–40 Fig. 6. Main structures attributable to the Nabitah deformation phase, and molasse basins. 3. The Panafrican orogeny In Saudi Arabia, the Panafrican orogeny is represented by a complex web of orogenic zones arranged in an anastomosing network of primarily strike-slip faults. It includes the Nabitah Belt (Quick, 1991), which is the central part of the structure, and several peripheral ranges. Note that this distribution (‘Orogenic belts’ in Fig. 6) does not correspond completely to the configuration of orogenic zones proposed by Stoesser and Camp (1985), based on the distribution of ultramafic complexes. 3.1. The Nabitah Belt The Nabitah Belt (Quick, 1991) is oriented generally north–south (Fig. 6) and divides the Shield in two. For descriptive purposes, the belt can be divided into an inner zone and an outer zone, both with distinct structural features. The inner zone, characterized by sigmoid fish-shaped shear zones whose geometry is clearly visible on satellite photos, is composed of large, pre-existing intrusions and sedimentary formations that have undergone compressional deformation. The outer zone is characterized by lateral slip along the margin, reflected by the presence of transpressional gneiss domes. The intrusive complexes of the inner zone of the Nabitah Belt are primarily batholiths that acquired a sigmoidal shape during Panafrican deformation. The most striking on the satellite images are the Furayhah Batholith (Kemp et al., 1982) and the Al Bara Batholith (Letalenet, 1979), both in the central part of the Nabitah Belt. The An Nimas Batholith in the southern part of the Shield (Prinz, 1983; Greenwood et al., 1986) shows a more complex evolution, with subsequent deformation. The large Murdama Basin, located east of the Nabitah Belt (Letalenet, 1979; Delfour, 1979b), displays increasing degrees of deformation and metamorphism from east to west. To the west, it is bounded by gneiss domes with foliation folds that have curved axes and merge progressively southwestward into the Nabitah structures and northeastward into the folds of the sedimentary basin. One of the domes, Jabal Kirsh, has been extensively studied from the standpoint of both geologic mapping (Delfour, 1979b, 1980b) and mineral exploration (Genna, 1996). Fig. 7 shows the general structure of the dome. The geometric and kinematic relations between shearing (C), foliation/schistosity/cleavage (S), and stretching lineation (L) are illustrated in Fig. 7f; they are valid for our entire study. Boudinaging at all scales in the gneiss is shown in Fig. 8. Many faults cut the Nabitah Belt, the largest being the Jabal Tin Fault (Fig. 9). This is marked by a band of NW– SE-trending gneiss whose width varies from 25 km in the northwest to 10 km in the southeast. The Jabal Tin exposures (Fig. 9b–e) illustrate the transpressional context of the deformation, with partial melting and the emplacement of leucogranite veins as shear planes during the last stages of deformation. The shear A. Genna et al. / Precambrian Research 117 (2002) 21–40 direction is indicated by the late deformation of cleavage seen in the horizontal (Fig. 9d) and vertical (Fig. 9e) planes. As in the northwestern part of the Shield, the relationships between foliation and microshearing indicate a left-lateral sense of shear for the whole of the Tin Complex. 3.2. The peripheral ranges The Panafrican chain of Saudi Arabia is composed of an axial part, the Nabitah Belt, and several parallel features called the peripheral ranges. The latter are punctuated with gneiss domes, which are common in the Proterozoic basement of Saudi Arabia; for example, Johnson 27 (1998) shows six major gneiss structures in his tectonic map of Saudi Arabia. The domes exhibit left-lateral transcurrent tectonism along the socalled ‘Najd’ faults and right-lateral movement along conjugate structures. The whole unit forms a network of anastomosing faults within the major orogenic zone known as the Nabitah Belt (Quick, 1991) and its adjacent structures. Analysis of several anticlinal gneiss structures shows that they are composed of ortho- or paraderived formations. A thoroughly studied sector is the northwestern part of the Shield (Grainger and Rashad Hanif, 1989; Davies, 1985; Hadley, 1987; Pellaton, 1982; Kemp, 1981; Pellaton, 1979; Fig. 10), where satellite imagery reveals a unique struc- Fig. 7. The Jabal Kirsh gneiss dome. (a) and (b) Location; (c) NE –SW section; (d) Stereographic projection of S/C (foliation/shear) relationships in the Jabal Kirsh gneiss (Schmidt, lower hemisphere); (e) General organization of second-order folds in the axial part of the dome near the Jabal Kirsh prospect (kyanite); 1 – Murdama Basin, 2 – foliation folds, 3 – Nabitah Belt, 4 – anticlinal axis, 5 – synclinal axis; white background: gneiss of the Kirsh dome; (f) Block diagram showing the relationship between foliation (S), shearing (C) and stretching lineation (L) for the Jabal Kirsh dome. 28 A. Genna et al. / Precambrian Research 117 (2002) 21–40 lineation parallel to the fold axes; it is subhorizontal over most of the dome and plunges south in the southern part, at the same angle as the dome itself. Kinematic deformation criteria, based on S/C plane relationships, indicate left-lateral shear. Fig. 8. Modes of deformation in the Jabal Kirsh Dome (boudinage). (a) Outcrop drawing; (b) Composite block diagram at the scale of a second-order fold; (c) Stereographic projection of the stretching lineation (Schmidt, lower hemisphere). tural arrangement comprising an anastomosing network of planar structures that demarcate large fish-shaped units (Fig. 10b) that are outlined by metamorphic foliation. Measurements revealed the existence of a network of ductile left-lateral transcurrent faults with occasional right-lateral faults. Numerous domes, four of which have been studied in detail, mark the network. The Hamadat anticlinorium is a huge gneiss dome (Pellaton, 1982; Kemp, 1981; Fig. 10) stretching 100 km in a NW– SE direction. It consists of folds that are strongly pinched to the north and more open to the south. The entire structure is marked by a well-developed stretching Fig. 9. Jabal Tin example. (a) Location; (b) General structure of the Tin Complex; (c) E – W section through the Tin Complex; (d) Outcrop drawing (plan view showing left-lateral shearing of foliation, contemporaneous with emplacement of leucogranite veins); (e) Outcrop drawing (cross section, showing compressional aspect of the Jabal Tin Dome); (f) Composite stereograph of the S/C (Foliation/Shear) relationships and the stretching lineation (L) in the Jabal Tin Dome (Schmidt, lower-hemisphere); 1 – Tertiary basalt, 2 – Bani Ghayy group, 3 – gneiss of the Tin Complex, 4 – pre-Bani Ghayy formations, 5 – fault, 6 – thrust, 7 – cleavage. A. Genna et al. / Precambrian Research 117 (2002) 21–40 29 Fig. 10. Panafrican structural development in the northwestern part of the Shield. (a) General structural pattern; (b) Satellite image survey of the metamorphic and kinematic foliation trace of the major faults (stereographic projection of S/C relationships, Schmidt, lower hemisphere); 1 – Paleozoic cover, 2 – molasse basin, 3 – wedge effect in the Al Ays region, 4 – synclinal axial trace, 5 – anticlinal axial trace. The Wajiyah anticlinorium (Kemp, 1981; Fig. 10) bounds the Hadiyah Basin to the north. It exhibits the same structural characteristics as the Hamadat anticlinorium, but with less clear-cut boundaries and no obvious direction of plunge. The shear direction is left-lateral. Relationships with the sedimentary formations of the Hadiyah Basin are clear and it is possible to determine that the intense, constrictive deformation advanced through the basin from north to south. This analysis is based on observations of the stretching lineation intensity in both sedimentary and intrusive rocks. The Baladiyah Complex, located southeast of the Thalbah Basin (Davies, 1985; Fig. 10), is exposed over 20 km along a north– south axis. It has a very regular geometry that is particularly apparent on aerial photos. A subvertical to very steeply dipping foliation, which, at its northern end, closes into a north-plunging dome axis, marks most of the structure. The complex also displays a well-developed subhorizontal stretching lineation parallel to the dome axis, again northplunging at the northern end of the structure. Amphibolite-facies metamorphism affected the central part of the dome (Davies, 1985), which also exhibits a loss of foliation that expresses planar deformation, in favour of a more developed lineation, indicating a primarily constrictive environment of the deformation. The Qazaz Complex, located east of the Thalbah Basin (Davies, 1985; Fig. 10) is generally antiformal with several second-order folds. In the northern part, the foliation forms an arch with a 30 A. Genna et al. / Precambrian Research 117 (2002) 21–40 NW – SE axis. The upper part of the structure consists of orthogneiss marked by a well-developed stretching lineation parallel to the dome axis. The core of the structure comprises mica schist (amphibolite facies) with two foliations: a first foliation is folded isoclinally along subhorizontal axial planes and a second one forms the anticlinal geometry of the dome. At outcrop scale, the second foliation forms the axial plane of the first-foliation folds, but at the scale of the dome, it forms the general anticlinal geometry. The northern ‘tail’ of the structure consists of amphibolitefacies gneiss (Davies, 1985) marked by left-lateral shear. A comparative analysis of these domes, which reflect transpression in a domain of ductile deformation, has enabled us to develop a general genetic model for this type of structure, as summarized in Fig. 11. In this model, the lower part of the structure would show subvertical metamorphic foliation with a slight horizontal lineation, the central part would be a zone of intense constriction, and the top would show subFig. 12. The molasse basins of the Nabitah orogeny. (a) Location; (b) Cross section of the Hadiyah Basin; (c) Cross section of the northern Thalbah Basin; (d) Cross section of the southern Thalbah Basin; (e) E – W cross section of the Murdama formations in the Junaynah Belt; (f) Cross section of the main Murdama Basin. 1 – molasse basin, 2 – granite, 3 – gneiss-dome foliation horizontal foliation and a poorly developed subhorizontal lineation. The consequences of this model are, for example, that the kyanite-bearing quartzite at Jabal Kirsh represents the exhumation of deep metamorphic facies and that the Hamadat anticlinorium represents the onset of gravitational processes lateral to the dome. 4. The molasse basins Fig. 11. Theoretical block diagram showing the evolution of the strain ellipsoid at the core of a gneiss dome. The transpressive setting causes simple-shear deformation to dominate over pure-shear deformation. Several molasse basins collected the sediments derived from the progressive erosion of the Nabitah Belt (Fig. 12). Among these are the large foreland basin and intramontane basins associated with the peripheral ranges. A. Genna et al. / Precambrian Research 117 (2002) 21–40 4.1. The foreland basin The foreland basin is the large north– southtrending Murdama Basin to the east of the Nabitah Belt (Letalenet, 1979; Delfour, 1979b; Fig. 12f), of which only the marginal sedimentary deposits were caught up in the deformation. The basin is cut by granitic intrusions whose ages vary from 650 to 530 Ma (Béziat and Bache, 1995). The sedimentary formations of the Murdama group consist primarily of sandstone from the underlying Afif Formation. At the basin’s western margin (Letalenet, 1979), the base of the series is marked locally by rhyolite flows and polygenetic conglomerate; argillaceous or conglomeratic intercalations and greywacke are present in the succession. At the eastern margin (Delfour, 1979b), the series begins with a conglomerate, more than 200 m thick (the Hibshi Formation) overlain by a complex formation (the Farida Formation) of carbonates, sandstone, conglomerate, and stromatolitic rocks. A 10 000-m-thick sandstone formation occupies the central part of the basin. 4.2. Intramontane basins associated with the peripheral ranges The Thalbah Basin (Davies, 1985) consists of two main structural units in the south (Fig. 12d) and a single basin in the north (Fig. 12c) that are filled with deposits of three distinct formations (Hashim, Ridam and Zhufar) separated by discontinuities. The oldest of these formations, the Hashim Formation, comprises a 50– 300-m-thick basal conglomerate, overlain by a 1000-m-thick succession of sandstone, siltstone, and intraformational conglomerate. This was transgressed from east to west by the Ridam Formation that, in the centre of the basin, is as much as 1000 m thick with a thick basal conglomerate. The Zhufar Formation lies discordant on the Ridam Formation and ranges in thickness from 600 m in the west to 1400 m in the east. These sedimentary formations also show significant structural and metamorphic variation from west to east. In the west, the succession shows little folding and is monoclinal with an eastward dip of 5 – 15°. In the east, in contact with the 31 gneiss, the succession is intensely folded, almost vertical, and displays a subhorizontal stretching lineation; it also shows significant vertical variation in its deformation. A left-lateral shear zone with characteristics identical to those of the Panafrican shear zones is observed in the basement rocks of the southeastern part of the basin (Johnson and Offield, 1994). A simple fold in the Thalbah sedimentary formations prolongs this fault. The Hadiyah Basin (Pellaton, 1979; Kemp, 1981), at the eastern margin of the Al Ays range (Fig. 10), consists of a single main structural basin that is folded and overturned to the east (Fig. 12b). The fill comprises three elementary megasequences, the first (Siqam Formation) being primarily volcanic and the other two (the Tura’ah and Aghrad formations) being entirely sedimentary. They each have a thick basal conglomerate and show significant variations in thickness; the maximum thickness of the three formations taken together is about 7000 m. As with the Thalbah Basin, the deposits of the Hadiyah Basin show significant variations in deformation style and metamorphic grade. In the west, folds are upright and fairly compressed, whereas in the east they are less closely spaced and east-verging. Similarly from south to north, the sediments pass from undeformed, with perfectly preserved sedimentary structures, to intensely deformed in the greenschist facies, with a well-developed subhorizontal stretching lineation identical to that found in the neighbouring gneiss. The molasse basins in the northwestern part of the Shield show varying degrees of deformation. Those to the west reveal no significant deformation and were never buried (no vertical or burial foliation, and incomplete lithification in places). Those to the east are metamorphosed (greenschist facies or higher), intensely deformed, and display the same well-developed horizontal lineation as the basement and nearby gneiss domes. These basins thus appear to be post-tectonic in the west and pre-tectonic in the east. This observation, which is supported by a geometric analysis of their sedimentary fill, leads us to consider them as syntectonic and as reflecting the topographic variations that accompanied this stage of deforma- 32 A. Genna et al. / Precambrian Research 117 (2002) 21–40 tion. Several sedimentary megasequences thus show unconformable relationships, induced by subsidence that was the result of crustal flexuring. The southwestern part of the Shield is characterized by the sedimentary molasse formations of the Ablah Basin (Greenwood, 1985a,b; Prinz, 1983; Carter and Johnson, 1987), a deformed sedimentary basin between the granites of the Shwas Pluton and the Thurat Batholith. In its northern part, the basin is generally monoclinal with an easterly dip, and has a fold train parallel to its axis; it shows little deformation and no metamorphism. In the east, the basal deposits comprise a coarse conglomerate, several hundred metres thick and in places dipping almost vertically along a subvertical boundary fault. In the west, the basal series is composed of gently dipping tuff and basic lava lying discordantly on the Thurat Pluton. The asymmetry marked by the difference in basal facies to the east and west indicates that the basin was initiated by an eastward tilt of its substratum. Above the basal deposits, the fill consists of siltstone, sandstone, and conglomerate, with interbedded volcanic flow deposits. The folded rocks show a general eastward dip, reflecting the progressive tilting of the basin during its formation. This configuration is similar to that of the Thalbah Basin (Davies, 1985), which developed along a left-lateral strike-slip fault of the Najd system during the Panafrican tectonism in the northwestern part of the Arabian Shield (Delfour, 1979a). Deformation in the Ablah Basin intensifies southward as the basin deposits thicken. A vertical foliation appears in the fold hinges, at first in the carbonate layers at the top of the succession and then in the other rock types. The folds become tighter and their axes become sigmoidal. The movement of these fold axes in a transpressive and rotational setting has caused a new deformation with a sigmoidal aspect. Still farther south, the deformation intensifies and the metamorphic grade reaches amphibolite-facies conditions (Greenwood, 1985a,b), so it is difficult to determine the initial structure of the sedimentary rocks. The Ablah Basin sediments are dated at 642# 1 Ma (Genna et al., 1999), i.e. contemporaneous with the Murdama basins in the north of the Shield, and lie discordantly over the Jiddah group that was affected by subvertical foliation before their deposition. According to Donzeau and Béziat (1989), the basin underwent two phases of deformation, the first with right-lateral shearing, and the second with left-lateral shearing. The Junaynah Fault corresponds to an intramontane trough in our model. The trough corresponds to a synclinal structure in the anticline– syncline succession. It is marked by the sedimentary formations of the Junaynah Belt (Greene, 1993), which are of Murdama age (Simons, 1988). Most likely highly eroded, they were folded and foliated (Fig. 12e) during a single phase of deformation. These formations display a subvertical foliation that is axial planar with respect to the single large crustal fold that forms each part of the basin. Relationships between the foliation planes and shear planes clearly indicate a left-lateral sense of shear with a subhorizontal stretching lineation. Note that this shear occurs on a north– south fault, and that faults with this orientation in the Shield are generally right-lateral. We can thus assume that the regional direction of shortening either varied from north to south in the belt, or varied over time. If it varied over time, the question is whether the deformation propagated from north to south or from south to north. The Murdama formations of the Junaynah Basin are discordant over the volcanic and volcano-sedimentary succession of the Halaban group to the east and also over some older granitic formations. The basal basin fill is a conglomerate that varies from a few to 300 m in thickness and that generally contains clasts of its nearby substratum (Halaban group and granitic formations), providing evidence of correlative tilting of the basement during the filling of the basin. The entire succession can be up to 800 m thick and consists primarily of sandstone and siltstone, in sequences several metres thick, with thin intermediate arkose and conglomerate. An east– west cross section through the west branch of the basin (Fig. 12) reveals a very asymmetric syncline. A. Genna et al. / Precambrian Research 117 (2002) 21–40 There is no boundary fault to the west, and the faults along the eastern margin are reverse strikeslip. Deformation was single phased. The presence of a subhorizontal stretching lineation suggests, as with the Murdama basins in the northern part of the Shield, a left-lateral transpressional mode during basin development. 5. Formation kinematics of the Panafrican structures The gneiss domes described above fit into a left-lateral kinematic context of deformation (Figs. 7–10). They are contained within the Panafrican Belt in Saudi Arabia, whose axial zone is the Nabitah Belt, consisting primarily of granite and granodiorite batholiths (Johnson, 1983) whose geometry, generally sigmoidal, is consistent with the formation kinematics of the domes. The left-lateral faults of this belt are oriented NW–SE, with conjugate N– S to NNE – SSW right-lateral faults also being observed. In the northwest of the Shield, a gneiss shear zone with a well-developed stretching lineation (Fig. 10) has kinematic criteria of the S/C planes that indicate right-lateral movement. In the Samran Belt (Genna, 1994; Bellivier et al., 1998), right-lateral faults that developed in the ductile–brittle transition were synchronous with the emplacement of gold mineralization in the chronology of regional tectonic deformation; in the Nabitah Belt, the north–south trend of the pre-Murdama Batholith margins correlates with the same structural position. In the southwest of the Shield, the main ancient volcano-sedimentary belts and the large batholiths underwent right-lateral transcurrent tectonism, the sedimentary markers of which are the Ablah formations (Donzeau and Béziat, 1989). Obvious relationships exist between the gneiss domes described above and the adjacent sedimentary formations of Murdama age. Sedimentological and structural analyses of these basins (Davies, 1985; Kemp, 1981; Pellaton, 1979; Camp, 1986) reveal that they were formed during an active tectonic period, with the basins occupying the synclinal depressions and the domes represent- 33 ing the anticlines of the same fold train. The synclines thus formed were filled by discontinuous detrital sedimentation, consisting of several megasequences, each with a base of thick conglomerate grading upward into sandstone and siltstone. Several unconformities, caused by synsedimentary tectonics, separate these megasequences. The basal conglomerates of each megasequence thus cover schistose and deformed rocks of the preceding one. The total thickness of the basin sediments was about 10 000 m. 6. The post-Nabitah tectonism The end-Proterozoic formations in Saudi Arabia indicate that the crustal thickening brought about by the formation of the Panafrican Belt was followed by an episode of crustal thinning. This was expressed by extensional deformation with contemporaneous bimodal magmatism, later followed by a return to marine sedimentation (Fig. Fig. 13. Composite structural framework of post-Nabitah extension in the Arabian Shield. T: axis of the Tabuk Basin, J: substratum axis of the Jeddah Basin, W: axis of the Widyan Basin, RK: axis of the Rub al Khali Basin. 1 – normal fault, 2 – strike-slip fault, 3 – gravitational slide, 4 – presumed boundary of the basin substratum, 5 – axis of the inferred basin substratum. 34 A. Genna et al. / Precambrian Research 117 (2002) 21–40 13), after a long post-Panafrican period of nondeposition. The volcanic activity was associated with various intrusive complexes and dike swarms dated between 530 and 590 Ma. The extrusive formations are known collectively as the Shammar group. Listric or gently dipping faults are interpreted as the traces of gravitational sliding in the uppermost part of the crust. The geometry of these normal faults and dike swarms indicates extension in multiple directions. The subsidence is also marked by more complex geometry of inferred basements of the intracontinental or marine basins induced by this deformation. Thinning was governed by a system of transform faults, known as the ‘Najd faults’, which also controlled the formation of the Jibalah basins in which the Shammar generally makes up the basal formations of the sedimentary fill. This extensional episode induced a marine transgression, evidenced by the carbonate platforms of the Jibalah basins at various places in the Shield. Continuation of the thinning process may explain the deposition of the marine formations of the Palaeozoic cover. The Late-Proterozoic crustal thinning caused crustal heating through the emplacement of intrusions and a concomitant rise of the isotherms. This crustal warming instigated a major metallogenic event in the Arabian– Nubian Shield during the Late-Proterozoic extension. Our results are consistent with recent studies proposing Late-Panafrican extension mechanisms in the Arabian–Nubian Shield of the Sinai Peninsula (Blasband, 1999; Blasband et al., 2000) and Egypt (Renno and Stanek, 1999a,b). Their models are based primarily on studies of magmatic core complexes and of the structure of the terranes. A significant phase of peneplanation then eroded the belt, revealing a variety of structural layers before deposition of the discordant Ar Rayyan and Jurdhawiah conglomerates. 6.1. Magmatism associated with crustal thinning The post-Panafrican intrusive complexes show a great variety of composition and shape. Their detailed geometry is presented in a recent aeromagnetic synthesis (Asfirane et al., 1999). Felsic intrusions are circular, elongate, or raindrop- Fig. 14. General distribution of dike swarms and late intrusions in the Shield. 1 – Recent formations, 2 – Tertiary basalt, 3 – intrusive rock, 4 – fault, 5 – dike swarm. shaped, whereas the mafic intrusions generally form sills. Moreover, the presence of concealed batholiths is shown by the dike swarms and ring dikes they produced, which give an indication of their general shape. Ring complexes and calderas are commonly associated with the batholiths. This magmatic activity was bimodal, being represented mainly by granite and gabbro in the plutonic bodies, and by rhyolite and basalt in the extrusive formations of the Shammar group. The mafic igneous rocks are mainly concentrated in the northern part of the Shield. In the northwest (Pellaton, 1979; Kemp, 1981), gabbro and diorite cut the Hadiyah group molasse deposits, which are the local representatives of the Panafrican molasse deposition. In the northeast, gabbro cuts the Jurdhawiyah Formation (Cole, 1988) and listwaenite is present in the thrusts that we believe correspond to listric gravitational-detachment faults that were tilted by late isostatic phenomena, as in the model set forth by Lister and Davis (1989) for the Tertiary structures of the USA. A. Genna et al. / Precambrian Research 117 (2002) 21–40 Multiple generations of dikes (Fig. 14) were emplaced in the Arabian Shield after the Panafrican compression. They tend to occur in linear or curved swarms and vary from a few centimetres to several tens of metres in thickness and from several metres to several tens of kilometres in length. They can also form unidirectional or bidirectional (perpendicular) swarms. In the latter scenario, the two directions correspond either to the same lithology or to different lithologies. They can also have a ‘cracked glass’ appearance, and some swarms are temporally superposed. The distribution of the dikes relative to the fault systems is not random. We have observed that they tend to be parallel to the late faults and in places indicate deviatoric stresses in bifurcations or fault relay zones. They also indicate the directions of opening in fault networks with horsetail arrays. They form a circular pattern around late intrusions, calderas, and the Shammar basins in the northern part of the Shield. For our structural analysis, we drew up a composite map of the dikes and used them to reconstruct the stress states during the phase of extension, knowing that the orientation of the opening plane indicates the minor principal stress component sigma 3. Other structural elements thought to be contemporaneous with the dikes, such as the displacement of the associated faults and the geometries of the correlative extrusive formations, were also used to constrain the basic kinematic processes. The dikes are generally subvertical with very diverse orientations. They are commonly rhyolitic, and are also found in swarms of bimodal composition (Camp, 1986). Their role in the successive tectonic events has never been clearly stated, even though they were very thoroughly surveyed during mapping for the 1:250 000-scale coverage of the Shield. However, the dikes that were mapped are generally the youngest ones (530–590 Ma), as they are not folded, are less weathered, do not blend with the country rocks through metamorphism, and are more easily discernable on aerial photos. The oldest proposed ages tend to depend on the age of the country rocks, but direct dating has also been done. For example, in the southern part of the Shield, the 35 dikes were emplaced between 519 and 587 Ma (Greenwood, 1985a,b). 6.2. Proposed model for the post-Nabitah extension Our observations on the Arabian Shield must be compared with the studies made on the evolution of the deformation and metamorphic conditions in the Proterozoic formations of the Sinai (Blasband, 1999; Brooijmans, 1999; Blasband et al., 2000), which comprise the northern extension of the Arabian–Nubian Shield. These studies revealed a NW–SE extension (Blasband, 1999) associated with granites and dikes (590– 530 Ma) and HT-LP metamorphism (Brooijmans, 1999) between 600 and 530 Ma. Farther west, in the Egyptian desert near Marsa Alam (Renno and Stanek, 1999a,b), circular post-orogenic intrusive complexes exhibit bimodal compositions in a structural compartment bounded by two of the Najd faults. A simple geologic evolution model can be developed that accounts for all the structural elements described above. In this model, summarized in Fig. 15, thinning was penetrative on a crustal scale and was accompanied by bimodal magmatism instigated by crustal melting and influxes of mantle-derived material that could have been transported via major faults. This resulted in the emplacement of complex intrusive suites and associated dike swarms. Magmatism was controlled by subvertical transform faults (Najd faults) that initiated the formation of narrow, deep basins, Fig. 15. Composite model of post-Panafrican crustal thinning in the Arabian –Nubian Shield. 1 – Mafic igneous rocks, 2 – felsic igneous rocks, 3 – dikes, 4 – syn-rift deposits, 5 – post-rift deposits. 36 A. Genna et al. / Precambrian Research 117 (2002) 21–40 and which were also injected by dikes. The dikes fed the flows that were deposited in the bottom of the basins. Dikes and mafic sills were emplaced at various levels in the structure and initiated or intruded local gravitational slides. The generally NE– SW opening direction of the dykes is compatible with the sliding direction of gravity units, as deduced from micro-tectonic analysis. Note that these phenomena, which continued up until 530 Ma ago (i.e. into the Paleozoic), led to the transgression of the Jibalah basins. Sedimentary carbonate platforms (Basahel et al., 1984) were undoubtedly the precursors of the initial geometry of the cover basins. Three large structures were preserved through the Paleozoic and may represent the continuation of this extensional event: the Tabuk and Widyan basins in the north, with Saq Sandstone at the base, and the Rub al Khali Basin to the south that contains Wajid Sandstone and Eocambrian salt formations (Faqira and Al-Hauwaj, 1998). The ‘Jeddah Basin’ (Fig. 13) probably is another unit of this assemblage, marked by the Fatima carbonate formation (Basahel et al., 1984). 7. Metallogenic implications This new description of the chronology of geodynamic events in the Arabian Shield has significant implications for our understanding of the mineralizing events that produced the gold and base-metal prospects and deposits in the Shield. We can distinguish three types of mineralization, corresponding to three main phases of structural development: (i) mineralization emplaced before the formation of the Nabitah Belt, (ii) mineralization contemporaneous with the Nabitah Fault activity, and (iii) mineralization postdating the belt that was emplaced during crustal thinning. Fig. 16 gives an example of each type of mineralization. 8. Chronology of structural events and conclusions A structural analysis of Saudi Arabia’s various Proterozoic sedimentary formations and their Fig. 16. Examples of gold and base-metal mineralization emplaced during the main structural events of the Arabian Shield. (a) Rabathan sedimentary massive sulphides, emplaced prior to formation of the Nabitah Belt (Wadi Bidah Belt; KochMathian et al. 1994). (b) Shayban hydrothermal prospect, emplaced during the Panafrican orogeny (Samran Belt; Genna 1994); gold is part of the hydrothermal mineralization emplaced along the faults. (c) Gold mineralization emplaced in subhorizontal faults of the Mohsiniyah prospect during crustal thinning (Silsilah District; Récoché et al., 1998a,b, Schmidt, lower hemisphere). substrata, provides a new tectonic synthesis whose principal events are outlined in Table 1. The first discernable events in the Shield were the development of marginal basins and volcanic arcs typical of the pre-Panafrican environment, but the exact kinematic processes involved in their formation cannot be discerned at present because A. Genna et al. / Precambrian Research 117 (2002) 21–40 37 Table 1 Composite table showing relationships between the tectonic phases and sedimentary formations Tectonic phase Primary structures Sedimentary formation Structural context Crustal thinning, 590–530 Ma Najd (transform) faults, normal faults, tilt blocks, associated basins Domes and basins, right- and left-lateral shear zones Shear zones, ophiolitic sutures Shammar, Jibalah, Ar Rayyan, Jurdhawiah, Fatima Murdama, Hadiyah, Thalbah, Ablah, Furayh, Ghamr, Junaynah Intracontinental extension Convergence Marginal basins, volcanic arcs Al Ays, Halaban, Jiddah, Bahah, Baish Nabitah orogeny, 690–590 Ma Closing of the oceanic domain, around 690 Ma Pre-Nabitah structures, before 690 Ma of their deformation; moreover, the mechanisms that closed the oceanic domains remain unknown. It is thought that these events were followed by a phase of erosion that probably was not homogeneous throughout the Shield. Next came the Panafrican tectonism, the major cratonization event of the Shield that produced gneiss domes and molasse basins over a system of intracontinental shear zones. The resultant belt was then subjected to gravitational events (late-orogenic extension and crustal thinning) controlled by the Najd transform faults that gave rise to the Shammar volcanic formations and the Jibalah detrital formations. Widespread erosion caused gradual peneplanation of the Shield and crustal thinning instigated a late marine transgression represented by the Jibalah carbonate platforms. This synthesis, which uses all currently available geologic data, is a new overall vision of the tectonic evolution of the Arabian Shield. It has direct implications for metallogenic models dealing with the emplacement of the stratiform or discordant sulphide mineralization (gold and base metals), because it proposes a new chronology of mineralizing events. The consequences we foresee from this study are primarily a better understanding of the genesis of the gneiss domes and the exhumation of highgrade metamorphic facies, as well as of the associated intracontinental sedimentary basins. This paper is a contribution to the overall understanding of the Arabian– Nubian Shield and the Panafrican Belt. Collision, obduction? Oceanization, subduction Acknowledgements The authors are grateful to Dr M.A. Tawfiq, Chairman (Acting), Saudi Geological Survey, and F. Le Lann (Director, BRGM Saudi Arabia), for their help and permission to publish this paper. We thank M. Sahl, J.M. Eberlé, J.M. Leistel, I. Salpeteur, and D. Thiéblemont for reviews and constructive discussions, and the BRGM Translation Service for translation and editing. This is BRGM Scientific Contribution No. 42. References Al-Saleh, A.M., Boyle, A.P., Mussett, A.E., 1998. 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