EGU21-3344
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-3344
EGU General Assembly 2021
© Author(s) 2021. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

Carboniferous granitic plutons of Nordensheld Archipelago (eastern part of the Kara Sea, Russian High Arctic)

Mikhail Kurapov1,2,4, Victoria Ershova1,2,3, Andrei Khudoley1, and Gennady Schneider4
Mikhail Kurapov et al.
  • 1Saint Petersburg State University, Institute of Earth Sciences, Regional geology, Saint-Petersburg, Russian Federation (mikhail.kurapov@gmail.com)
  • 2Diamond and Precious Metal Geology Institute, Siberian Branch, Russian Academy of Sciences, Yakutsk, Russian Federation
  • 3Geological Institute, Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow, Russian Federation
  • 4A.P. Karpinsky Russian Geological Research Institute (VSEGEI), Saint-Petersburg, Russian Federation

Nordensheld Archipelago is a relatively large cluster of islands in the eastern part of the Kara Sea located north of the Taymyr Peninsula. Belonging to the Northern Taimyr tectonic domain of the Taimyr-Severnaya Zemlya fold-and-thrust belt, this area in Late Paleozoic represented southern part of the Kara Terrane.

Samples were collected from outcrops across the Nordensheld Archipelago and shallow offshore wells in the close proximity to the archipelago and from offshore well located in Toll bay (eastern part of the Kara sea). Studied plutons are represented by coarse- to medium-grained biotite, two mica and hornblende-biotite granites. U-Pb dating of the granites yelled ages of ca. 334 and 326 Ma. The granitoids are high- to medium acidic, mainly calc-alkalic to alkali-calcic, ferroan and magnesian, metalumious and peraluminous.

The U-Pb zircon age from the Toll Bay well is the first granite age obtained offshore within eastern part of the Kara Sea. Petrographic and geochemical features of the Nordensheld Archipelago and eastern Kara Sea Visean-Serpukhovian granites indicate their suprasubduction origin. This correlates well with data from Northern Taimyr and provides new evidence for the Uralian Ocean subduction magmatism within Taimyr-Severnaya Zemlya fold-and-thrust belt.

This research was supported by RFBR grant № 19-35-90006, Russian Science Foundation grant № 20-17-00169.

How to cite: Kurapov, M., Ershova, V., Khudoley, A., and Schneider, G.: Carboniferous granitic plutons of Nordensheld Archipelago (eastern part of the Kara Sea, Russian High Arctic), EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-3344, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-3344, 2021.