Abstract
The irreversible chemical differentiation of the Earth’s mantle to produce sialic crust over the past 3900 Ma has most probably occurred during widely separated, but short-lived, accretion episodes. These episodes involved the massive addition of juvenile sialic magma to the Earth’s surface, thickening pre-existing crust. Simple numerical simulations, based on tectonic, petrological and geochemical observations on Archaean high-grade orthogneiss terranes, have been used to explore the metamorphic and geochemical consequences of massive thickening of sialic crust during short-lived accretion episodes. The location of the main sites of magmatic addition within the crust exert a profound influence on the thermal régimes. Geochemical differentiation of the continental crust by partial-melt and vapour-phase-controlled processes, and the development of granulite facies mineral assemblages can be integrated with the simple numerical models. Finally, the survival of thick Archaean continental crust imples the contemporaneous stabilization of thick lithospheric substructures to the newly formed continental masses.