Based on an integrated study of geological and geophysical data, a tectonic model for the Palaeoproterozoic evolution of the Svecofennian orogen within the Fennoscandian Shield at the northwestern corner of the East European Craton is proposed. The Svecofennian orogen is suggested to have formed during five, partly overlapping, orogenies: Lapland-Savo, Lapland-Kola, Fennian, Nordic and Svecobaltic. The Svecofennian orogen evolved in four major stages, involving microcontinent accretion (1.92-1.88 Ga), large-scale extension of the accreted crust (1.87-1.84 Ga), continent-continent collision (1.87-1.79 Ga) and finally gravitational collapse (1.79 and 1.77 Ga). The stages partly overlapped in time and space, as different processes operated simultaneously in different parts of the plates. In the Lapland-Savo and Fennian orogenies, microcontinents (suspect terranes) and island arcs were accreted to the Karelian microcontinent, which itself was accreting to Laurentia in the Lapland-Kola orogeny. The formation of the Svecofennian orogen was finalized in two continental collisions producing the Nordic orogen in the west (Fennoscandia-Amazonia) and Svecobaltic orogen in the SSW (Fennoscandia- Sarmatia). The collisions were immediately followed by gravitational collapse.
Accretionary processes contributed to major continental growth in Fennoscandia during the Palaeoproterozoic, mainly from 2.1 to 1.8 Ga. The composite Svecofennian orogen covers c. 1×106 km2 and comprises the Lapland–Savo, Fennia, Svecobaltic and Nordic orogens. It is a collage of 2.1–2.0 Ga microcontinents and 2.02–1.82 Ga island arcs attached to the Archaean Karelian craton between 1.92 and 1.79 Ga. Andean-type vertical magmatic additions, especially at c. 1.89 and c. 1.8 Ga, were also important in the continental growth. The Palaeoproterozoic crust is the end product of accretionary growth, continental collision and orogenic collapse. Preserved accretional sections are found in areas where docking of rigid blocks has prevented further shortening. The Pirkanmaa belt represents a composite accretionary prism, and other preserved palaeosubduction zones are identified in the Gulf of Bothnia and the Baltic Sea areas. In the southern segment of the Lapland–Savo orogen collision between the Archaean continent (lower plate) and the Palaeoproterozoic arc–microcontinent assembly (upper plate) produced a special type of lateral crustal growth: the Archaean continental edge decoupled from its mantle during initial collision and overrode the arc and its mantle during continued collision.
The Lapland-Kola orogen, Inglefield mobile belt and the Rinkian fold belt/Nagssugtoqidian orogen are continent-continent collision zones with limited formation of new Paleoproterozoic crust, whereas the Ketilidian orogen displays a convergent plate-tectonic system, without subsequent collision. The composite Svecofennian orogen is responsible for the main Paleoproterozoic crustal growth of Fennoscandia.
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