Geopotential evidence of a missing lithospheric root beneath the eastern Indian shield: An integrated approach

•Complete Bouguer anomaly map of the eastern Indian shield based on terrestrial gravity data.•Integrated lithospheric density model of the eastern Indian shield using four geopotential proxies, namely Free-air, complete Bouguer, Geoid, and topography.•The thinned lithosphere of the eastern Indian sh...

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Veröffentlicht in:Precambrian research 2021-05, Vol.356, p.106116, Article 106116
Hauptverfasser: Singh, A.P., Kumar, Niraj, Rao, B. Nageswara, Tiwari, V.M.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•Complete Bouguer anomaly map of the eastern Indian shield based on terrestrial gravity data.•Integrated lithospheric density model of the eastern Indian shield using four geopotential proxies, namely Free-air, complete Bouguer, Geoid, and topography.•The thinned lithosphere of the eastern Indian shield (~135 km) is likely to be associated with, or reflection of, the thermo-chemical erosion related to the widespread re-fertilization.•The thickest lithosphere (~200 km) is observed beneath the foreland Ganga Basin. The eastern Indian shield consists of Archaean Singhbhum Craton and Proterozoic Chhotanagpur Gneissic Complex sandwiching the Singhbhum Mobile Belt. Since the cratonization of the Singhbhum Craton in Archaean, the growth of the eastern Indian shield took place in time and space through tectono-magmatic processes. The stability of cold and thick lithosphere is fundamental to long-term survival of cratons, whereas the geophysical studies have detected the lithosphere-asthenosphere boundary (LAB) under the eastern Indian shield at depths too shallow to be called stable. We analysed the terrestrial Bouguer gravity anomaly, and satellite-based free-air anomaly, geoid undulation, and elevation data to ascertain the 2D lithospheric density structure across the region. Our density model illustrates that the density inhomogeneity exists in the crust across the three tectonic domains of the eastern Indian shield. The derived crustal model shows an upper and lower crustal density variation from 2740 to 2770 kg/m3, and from 2930 to 2940 kg/m3, respectively, and a reasonably smooth Moho at 37–41 km depth. Towards the north, the Moho undulates from 40 to 43 km under the foreland Ganga basin, whereas in the south, it varies from 38 to 30 km under the Eastern Ghats Mobile Belt and lastly moves to ~20 km in the Bay of Bengal. In the southern part of the Singhbhum Craton, an undissipated lithospheric mantle root is found at a depth of ~150 km. Otherwise, the LAB shallows to ~132 km in the northern Singhbhum Craton and Singhbhum Mobile Belt and then thickens to about 135–140 km depth beneath the Chhotanagpur Gneissic Complex. The foreland Ganga basin toward the extreme north is characterized by a more in-depth LAB lying at a depth of over 200 km. The LAB, in the Bay of Bengal, is at a depth of 112–125 km, except for the Kolkata coast (135 km). Moderate crustal density difference in various crustal domains, as well as an almost smooth crust-mantle boundary at 37–40 k
ISSN:0301-9268
1872-7433
DOI:10.1016/j.precamres.2021.106116