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Featured researches published by Grant M. Bybee.


Geosphere | 2018

Magma-driven, high-grade metamorphism in the Sveconorwegian Province, southwest Norway, during the terminal stages of Fennoscandian Shield evolution

Trond Slagstad; Nick M.W. Roberts; Nolwenn Coint; Ingjerd Høy; Simone Sauer; Christopher L. Kirkland; Mogens Marker; Torkil S. Røhr; Iain H.C. Henderson; Martin A. Stormoen; Øyvind Skår; Bjørn Eske Sørensen; Grant M. Bybee

Recently it has been argued that the Sveconorwegian orogeny in southwest Fennoscandia comprised a series of accretionary events between 1140 and 920 Ma, behind a long-lived, active continental margin characterized by voluminous magmatism and high-grade metamorphism. Voluminous magnesian granitic magmatism is recorded between 1070 and 1010 Ma (Sirdal Magmatic Belt, SMB), with an apparent drop in activity ca. 1010-1000 Ma. Granitic magmatism resumed ca. 1000-990 Ma, but with more ferroan (A type) compositions (hornblende-biotite granites). This ferroan granitic magmatism was continuous until 920 Ma, and included emplacement of an AMCG (anorthosite-mangerite-charnockite-granite) complex (Rogaland Igneous Complex). Mafic rocks with ages corresponding to the spatially associated granites suggest that heat from underplated mafic magma was the main driving force for lower crustal melting and long-lived granitic magmatism. The change from magnesian to ferroan compositions may reflect an increasingly depleted and dehydrated lower crustal source. High-grade metamorphic rocks more than similar to 20 km away from the Rogaland Igneous Complex yield meta-morphic ages of 1070-1015 Ma, corresponding to SMB magmatism, whereas similar rocks closer to the Rogaland Igneous Complex yield ages between 1100 and 920 Ma, with an apparent age peak ca. 1000 Ma. Ti-in zircon temperatures from these rocks increase from similar to 760 to 820 degrees C ca. 970 Ma, well before the inferred emplacement age of the Rogaland Igneous Complex (930 Ma), suggesting that long-lived, high-grade metamorphism was not directly linked to the emplacement of the latter, but rather to the same mafic underplating that was driving lower crustal melting. Structural data suggest that the present-day regional distribution of high-and low-grade rocks reflects late-stage orogenic doming.


Applied Earth Science | 2016

Lamprophyric dykes in the Bushveld Complex: the lithospheric mantle and its metallogenic bearing on the Bushveld large igneous province

Hannah S.R. Hughes; Judith A. Kinnaird; Iain McDonald; Paul A. M. Nex; Grant M. Bybee

In Southern Africa, the geodynamic setting and source(s) of magmas that fed the Bushveld Complex remain unresolved – not least the controls on the metallogenic signature of this large igneous provi...


Earth and Planetary Science Letters | 2014

Pyroxene megacrysts in Proterozoic anorthosites: Implications for tectonic setting, magma source and magmatic processes at the Moho

Grant M. Bybee; Lewis D. Ashwal; Steven B. Shirey; Mary F. Horan; Timothy D. Mock; Torgeir B. Andersen


Earth and Planetary Science Letters | 2010

New evidence for a volcanic arc on the western margin of a rifting Rodinia from ultramafic intrusions in the Andriamena region, north-central Madagascar

Grant M. Bybee; Lewis D. Ashwal; Allan H. Wilson


Earth and Planetary Science Letters | 2018

On the development of the calc-alkaline and tholeiitic magma series: A deep crustal cumulate perspective

Emily J. Chin; Kei Shimizu; Grant M. Bybee; Monica E. Erdman


Earth-Science Reviews | 2017

Crustal evolution and the temporality of anorthosites

Lewis D. Ashwal; Grant M. Bybee


Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology | 2017

Large-scale magmatic layering in the Main Zone of the Bushveld Complex and episodic downward magma infiltration

Ben Hayes; Lewis D. Ashwal; Susan J. Webb; Grant M. Bybee


Earth and Planetary Science Letters | 2014

Debating the petrogenesis of Proterozoic anorthosites – Reply to comments by Vander Auwera et al. on “Pyroxene megacrysts in Proterozoic anorthosites: Implications for tectonic setting, magma source and magmatic processes at the Moho”

Grant M. Bybee; Lewis D. Ashwal; Steven B. Shirey; Mary F. Horan; Timothy D. Mock; Torgeir B. Andersen


Groundwater for Sustainable Development | 2018

Fluoride concentrations in the arid Namaqualand and the Waterberg groundwater, South Africa: Understanding the controls of mobilization through hydrogeochemical and environmental isotopic approaches

Tamiru Abiye; Grant M. Bybee; Joyce Leshomo


2015 AGU Fall Meeting | 2015

Slowly ascending magmas in long-lived accretionary orogens: unraveling temporal variations in the Cordilleran-style Sveconorwegian Orogeny

Grant M. Bybee

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Lewis D. Ashwal

University of the Witwatersrand

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Mary F. Horan

Carnegie Institution for Science

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Steven B. Shirey

Carnegie Institution for Science

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Timothy D. Mock

Carnegie Institution for Science

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Allan H. Wilson

University of the Witwatersrand

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Ben Hayes

University of the Witwatersrand

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Joyce Leshomo

University of the Witwatersrand

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Judith A. Kinnaird

University of the Witwatersrand

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Paul A. M. Nex

University of the Witwatersrand

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