John P. Craddock, Michael S. McGillion, and Gerald F. Webers. Geology, Macalester College, 1600 Grand Ave., St. Paul, MN 55105
Cambrian carbonates in the Hertiage Range of the Ellsworth Mountains, West Antarctica host a series of carbonate-rich breccia bodies that were contemporaneous with the Permian Gondwanide orogen. The breccia bodies had a three-stage genesis, with the older breccias containing Cambrian limestone (and marble) clasts supported by calcite, whereas the younger breccias are nearly clast-free and composed entirely of matrix calcite. Breccia clasts, calcite matrix and detrital matrix samples were analyzed using x-ray fluorescence (major and trace elements), x-ray diffraction, and stable isotopes (C, O) and suggest that the breccias formed as part of a closed geochemical system, at considerable depth, within the Cambrian limestone host as the Ellsworth Mountains deformed into a fold-and-thrust belt along the margin of Gondwana.
[Manuscript]