Thermo-compositional structure of the South American Platform
lithosphere: Evidence of stability, modification and erosion
Abstract
Constraints on the structure of cratonic lithosphere are essential to
improve our understanding of craton formation, evolution and long-term
stability. Here, we perform a joint inversion for the thermal and
compositional structure of the mantle lithosphere below the South
America Platform, using Rayleigh wave group velocities, elevation, and
geoid height. Thick thermal lithosphere (200-300 km) is found below the
southern Amazonian and São Francisco Cratons and adjoining Parecis Basin
and northern Paraná Basin. The southern Rio de la Plata Craton also
retains a 200-250 km thick keel. Compositionally, Amazonian, São
Francisco and Rio de la Plata lithosphere has a metasomatic and possibly
eclogite signature similar to that of North American Proterozoic
collision belts. Parecis and northern Paraná lithosphere has likely been
altered by Mesozoic plume activity throughout most of its depth, while
the rest of the Paraná Basin and the Chaco and Patanal basins appear to
have lost the lithospheric root below ~100 km depth that
was there during intracratonic basin formation. The low elevation and
high geoid of the western Paraná Basin requires a dense (eclogite) layer
within the crust/shallow lithosphere, possibly associated with the
NeoProterozoic western Paraná Suture Zone and/or Mesozoic plume
activity, while topography and geoid of the basins further west and of
the western Rio de la Plata craton seem affected by dynamic
(subduction-related) topography. Thus, the variable geophysical
structure of the platform lithosphere reflects a history that involves
besides some stable keels, significant modification and thinning.