The Araguaia belt, Brazil : part of a neoproterozoic continental-scale strike-slip.
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2004
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Abstract
The Araguaia Belt is part of the Tocantins Orogen, a Neoproterozoic orogen that
formed during the collision between the Amazonia, São Francisco/Congo and West African
Paleo-Continents. This collision contributed to the assembly of West Gondwana. We mapped
parts of the Araguaia Belt in its south and central portions in northern Brazil. Our mapping
suggests two phases of deformation. The first resulted in the development of N-S trending
amphibolite-facies transpresssional structures with a reverse-sinistral movement with vergence
towards the Amazonian Craton on the west. The age of this deformation phase is
possibly Paleoproterozoic. The second phase generated N-S dextral strike-slip faults that
cross-cut older structures. This phase was accompanied by retrograde metamorphism. We
propose that these strike-slip faults connect with the east-west trending dextral strike-slip
faults in the Borborema Orogen on the northern margin of the São Francisco Craton. Movement
on faults fringing the Amazonian Craton combined with that of the Araguaia-Borborema
strike-slip system, accommodated lateral escape of terranes wedged between the
Amazonian and São Francisco-Congo Cratons during the Neoproterozoic.
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FONSECA, M. A.; OLIVEIRA, C. G. de.; EVANGELISTA, H. J. The Araguaia belt, Brazil: part of a neoproterozoic continental-scale strike-slip. Journal of the Virtual Explorer, v. 17, n. 08, p. 01-16, 2004. Disponível em: <https://virtualexplorer.com.au/article/araguaia-belt-brazil>. Acesso em: 20 de jun. 2017.