The Kaapvaal Craton covers an area of approximately and is joined to the
Zimbabwe Craton to the north by the
Limpopo Belt. To the south and west, the Kaapvaal Craton is flanked by
Proterozoic orogens, and to the east by the
Lebombo monocline that contains
Jurassic igneous rocks associated with the break-up of
Gondwana. The Kaapvaal Craton formed and stabilised between 3.7 and 2.6 Ga by the emplacement of major
granitoid batholiths that thickened and stabilised the continental
crust during the early stages of an
arc-related
magmatism and
sedimentation cycle. The craton is a mixture of early Archean (3.0–3.5 Ga) granite
greenstone terranes and older
tonalitic gneisses (ca. 3.6–3.7 Ga), intruded by a variety of granitic
plutons (3.3–3.0 Ga). Subsequent evolution of the Kaapvaal Craton (3.0–2.7 Ga) is thought to be associated with continent–arc collision that caused an overlaying
succession of basins filled with thick sequences of both
volcanic and sedimentary rocks. This was then followed by episodic extension and
rifting when the Gaborone–Kanye and Ventersdorp sequences were developed. Early Archean crust is well exposed only on the east side of the craton and comprises a collage of subdomains and crustal blocks characterised by distinctive igneous rocks and deformations. Late Archean
metamorphism joined the Southern Marginal Zone of the Kaapvaal Craton to the Northern Marginal Zone of the
Zimbabwe Craton approximately 2.8–2.5 Ga by the wide
orogenic Limpopo Belt. The belt is an east-northeast trending zone of
granulite facies tectonites that separates the granitoid-greenstone terranes of the Kaapvaal and Zimbabwe cratons. ==Limpopo Central Zone==