New age data on the low-temperature regional metamorphism of Mt. Medvednica (Croatia)

2006 ◽  
Vol 49 (3) ◽  
pp. 207-221 ◽  
Author(s):  
Katalin Judik ◽  
Kadosa Balogh ◽  
Darko Tibljaš ◽  
Péter Árkai
1996 ◽  
Vol 133 (3) ◽  
pp. 237-254 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yaron Katzir ◽  
Alan Matthews ◽  
Zvi Garfunkel ◽  
Manfred Schliestedt ◽  
Dov Avigad

AbstractThe six exposures of the Upper tectonic Unit of the Cycladic Massif occurring on the island of Tinos are shown to comprise a metamorphosed dismembered ophiolite complex. The common stratigraphic section consisting of tens-of-metres- thick tectonic slices of mafic phyllites overlain by serpentinites and gabbros is considered to have been derived by a combination of thrusting during obduction and subsequent attenuation by low-angle normal faults. All rock types show evidence of a phase of regional greenschist-facies metamorphism, which in the case of the phyllites is accompanied by penetrative deformation. The greenschist-facies metamorphism in gabbros is preceded by high temperature sea-floor amphibolite-facies alteration, whereas in the serpentinites, the antigorite + forsterite greenschist-facies assemblage overprinted an earlier low temperature lizardite serpentinite. Trace element patterns of the mafic phyllites and a harzburgitic origin of meta-serpentinites suggest a supra subduction zone (SSZ) affinity for the ophiolitic suite. ρ18O values of phyllites, gabbros and serpentinites range from 6 to 15%o. Model calculations indicate that such values are consistent with low temperature (50–200°C) alteration of parent rocks by sea-water at varying water/rock ratios. This would agree with the early low temperature mineralogy of the serpentinites, but the early high temperature alteration of the gabbros would require the presence of 18O-enriched sea-water.The following overall history is suggested for Tinos ophiolitic slices. (1) Oceanic crust was generated at a supra-subduction zone spreading centre with high temperature alteration of gabbros. (2) Tectonic disturbance (its early hot stages recorded in an amphibolitic shear zone at the base of serpentinites) brought the already cooled ultramafics into direct contact with sea-water and caused low-T serpentinization. (3) Tectonism after cooling involved thrusting which caused repetition and inversion of the original order of the oceanic suite. (4) Regional metamorphism of all the ophiolite components at greenschist-facies conditions (−450°C) overprinted the early alteration mineralogy. It was probably induced by continued thrusting and piling up of nappes. The Tinos ophiolite, dated as late Cretaceous and genetically related to other low pressure rock-units of the same age in the Aegean, differs in age and degree of dismemberment and metamorphism from ophiolites in mainland Greece.


1977 ◽  
Vol 14 (8) ◽  
pp. 1940-1946 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alan B. Blaxland ◽  
Laurence W. Curtis

An 11-point Rb–Sr whole-rock isochron for the regionally metamorphosed Red Wine alkaline province gives an age of intrusion of 1345 ± 75 Ma (errors quoted at 2σ) and an initial 87Sr/86Sr ratio of (1.7021 ± 0.0103. Two 5-point mineral isochrons give ages of ~1000 Ma that represent metamorphic 'resetting' of the alkaline rocks. The whole-rock intrusion age compares closely with the early stage of magmatism in the Gardar Province of south Greenland where un-metamorphosed agpaitic igneous rocks, similar to those of the Red Wine Province, occur. In both provinces, alkaline plutonic rocks are associated, both spatially and chronologically, with thick sequences of continental sediments and basaltic lavas, and the new age data lend strong support to the supposition that the Gardar and Red Wine rocks are parts of the same pre-drift magmatic province and inferred rift system. The Gardar Province has, however, escaped the effects of the Grenville regional metamorphism which severely affected the Red Wine rocks.


1997 ◽  
Vol 134 (5) ◽  
pp. 703-716 ◽  
Author(s):  
HENRI MALUSKI ◽  
FRANTIšEK PATOCČKA

The mafic metavolcanic rocks (blueschists and greenschists) of the Rýchory Mountains crystalline complex (West Sudetes) experienced sea-floor hydrothermal alteration (spilitization?) prior to regional metamorphism. The metabasite geochemistry (namely trace element and REE abundances) indicates that the protolith was comparable in composition with (1) tholeiitic to transitional ocean-floor basalts and (2) transitional and alkaline intra-oceanic island basalts. Two main metamorphic events affected the Rýchory Mountains metabasites. In an earlier high pressure–low temperature metamorphic event, the rocks experienced blueschist facies metamorphism. The results of 40Ar–39Ar geochronology studies on phengites from the mafic blueschists date the end of the earlier metamorphism to 360 Ma. The greenschist metamorphic overprint followed around 340 Ma. The elongated bodies of mafic metavolcanic rocks are situated within the prominent NNE–SSW Leszczyniec shear zone following the trend of the Rýchory Mountains and the Rudawy Janowickie Mountains. Both the geochemical affinities and the blueschist facies metamorphism of the metabasites suggest that this shear zone evolved from the Variscan suture dividing western and central terranes of the West Sudetes. According to the radiometric age for the end of the high pressure–low temperature metamorphism, the terranes accreted during the Famennian. A considerable time-span between the formation of the metabasite protolith and the blueschist metamorphism may indicate long-lasting subduction of a large oceanic plate between Gondwana and Laurussia, possibly accompanied by terrane accretion, prior to the Variscan orogeny.


1977 ◽  
Vol 41 (320) ◽  
pp. 473-479 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. G. Moeskops ◽  
G. R. Davis

SummaryUnusual replacement-type sulphide mineralization occurs in the northern part of the Bulong Complex, about 30 km east of Kalgoorlie, Western Australia. The mineralization is non-economic (up to 0·5% Ni, 0·4% Cu, 0·1% Co, and 8·6% S) and occurs in altered unlayered olivine-rich rocks immediately above a thin sheet-like inclusion of country rock. The supergene-modified primary opaque assemblage pyrrhotine-magnetite-pyrite-chalcopyrite-(pentlandite) is texturally unusual in that the opaques are largely pseudomorphic after primary olivine grains, mainly within irregular fracture networks in a manner similar to ‘early’ serpentine. Textural relations between opaques and silicates indicate that the mineralization was introduced during the early stages of serpentinization prior to the onset of deformation and regional metamorphism. Monoclinic pyrrhotine is the main opaque phase, with some grains containing relict cores of the hexagonal variety. Magnetite associated with the mineralization is Ni-poor (< 0·1% Ni) compared with ‘serpentinization magnetite’ from elsewhere in the Bulong Complex, which contains 0·5–0·8% Ni. As the mineralization was intersected at relatively shallow depth, supergene alteration effects are evident; pyrrhotine is locally altered to pyrite and marcasite (texturally and chemically distinct from the primary pyrite), and pentlandite is largely replaced by cupriferous violarite.Textural features and consideration of phase relations in the system Cu-Fe-S-O suggest that the mineralization is of low-temperature (350± °C) hydrothermal origin. By contrast, the more commonly developed Fe-Ni-Cu sulphide mineralization of the Kalgoorlie region is generally considered to be of high-temperature (1200± °C) magmatic origin.


2020 ◽  
pp. jgs2020-173
Author(s):  
Angus L. Nixon ◽  
Stijn Glorie ◽  
Alan S. Collins ◽  
Jo A. Whelan ◽  
Barry L. Reno ◽  
...  

The Precambrian Pine Creek Orogen and Arnhem Province represent two of the oldest basement terrains in northern Australia and are often considered to be devoid of significant regional deformation since the cessation of regional metamorphism in the Paleoproterozoic. A major caveat in the current hypothesis of long lived structural inactivity is the absence of published low-temperature thermochronological data and thermal history models for this area. Here we report the first apatite fission track and (U–Th–Sm)/He data for crystalline samples from both the Pine Creek Orogen and Arnhem Province, complemented with apatite geochemistry data acquired by electron microprobe and laser ablation mass spectrometry methods, and present multi-kinetic low-temperature thermal history models. The thermal history models for the Pine Creek Orogen and Arnhem Province reveal a distinct phase of denudation coeval with the Paleozoic Alice Springs Orogeny. By integrating with previous studies, we suggest that this event deformed a larger area of the Australian crust than previously perceived. Localised Mesozoic thermal perturbations proximal to the Pine Creek Shear-Zone additionally record evidence for Mesozoic reheating contemporaneous with mantle induced subsidence and the onset of sedimentation in the Money Shoal Basin, while the Arnhem Province samples demonstrate no evidence of Mesozoic thermal perturbations.Supplementary material: EPMA protocol comparison, AFT plots and modelling, additional geochemistry, datasets and instrumentation parameters are available at https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.c.5206664


This contribution is concerned with the regional metamorphism of fine-grained (pelitic) sedimentary materials, and with the pelitic components of coarser sediments. It emphasizes the possible importance of purely chemical sedimentary rocks, and the preservation of chemical patterns within them, in the elucidation of some regional metamorphic mineralogical processes. The materials and examples used come largely from the category of exhalative sediments, of which stratiform metallic sulphide orebodies and their associated exhalites are important members. A few examples come from volcanic rocks that have been altered by exhalative processes. The special significance of chemical sediments stems from their propensity for the development of highly complex metamorphic silicate mineral assemblages within relatively minuscule volumes of rock, and from their commonly sharply defined chemical bedding and chemical sedimentary facies patterns. As the primary nature of such chemical bedding and chemical layering and zoning in completely unmetamorphosed materials is observable and known, and as their sharp boundaries and other well-defined features can be examined in a full range of unmetamorphosed to highly metamorphosed environments, they may be used as extremely sensitive markers for the detection and measurement of any chemical movement that may have taken place during regional metamorphism. Detailed examination of such evidence appears to indicate a general lack of diffusion and reaction, and a common lack of attainment of mineral equilibrium, in the development of the regional metamorphic silicate assemblages of a number of such stratiform ore deposits and their associated exhalative materials. This, together with the common interbedded nature of metamorphic silicate, sulphide, carbonate, etc., and the faithful maintenance of primary sedimentary chemical facies patterns within many exhalative metasediments suggests that the silicates, like the accompanying sulphides and associated compounds, may derive directly and in situ from early-formed precursor materials rather than from extensive elemental diffusion and metamorphic reaction. That particular clays and zeolites derive from specific precursors in many instances has been recognized for a long time. That many metamorphosed bedded oxides (including quartz), together with carbonates, sulphates, sulphides and authigenic silicates such as the feldspars, have derived from sedimentary: diagenetic precursors is self-evident and unavoidable, and establishes precursor derivation for at least some regional metamorphic minerals as a principle, not an hypothesis. What is not known, however, is the extent to which this principle applies to the broader spectrum of metamorphic silicates. The present contribution examines this problem. The evidence of ‘ metamorphic ’ silicates in a range of unmetamorphosed and littlemetamorphosed rocks, in present ocean-floor sediments, in unmetamorphosed volcanic alteration products and in modern geothermal systems is examined. The preservation of possible precursor materials in a variety of rocks, and the synthesis of a number of ‘ metamorphic ’ minerals by low-temperature solution experimentation and in low-temperature industrial products is considered. It is deduced that most of the well-known regional metamorphic minerals may in fact be produced directly from low-temperature sedimentary/diagenetic/alteration materials, and that such precursors may be of simple or complex kind. It is suggested that the direct derivation of regional metamorphic silicates from precursors may resolve the problem of the elusive metamorphic mineral reaction, and that the principal regional metamorphic grade indicators may be the temperatures of precursor transformations rather than temperatures of reactions. Several implications of the precursor principle are then examined: its significance in the interpretation of zoning of regional metamorphic mineral assemblages and mineral chemistry; in considerations of metamorphic grade and the development of grainsize; in the identities of certain metamorphic equilibria, intergrowths and ‘retrograde’ materials; and in the deduction of earlier environments of rock formation and alteration. In this general connection it is proposed that the overall regional metamorphic process may be substantially indigenous: that through their primary nature certain materials, e.g. some andesitic-dacitic volcaniclastic rocks, may be predisposed to metamorphose themselves, and that this may be accentuated by the petro-tectonic setting in which they form, e.g. island arc - eugeosynclinal provinces, with their characteristically inter-related calc-alkaline volcanism, riftrelated palaeogeographical features and highly patterned heat flow. Effects of climate may be superimposed on this: some of the more highly developed regional metamorphic zoning may arise in calc-alkaline volcanic sediments deposited in tropical island arc shelf areas, and in sediments laid down in large saline lakes of continental volcanic rift provinces. From all this it is proposed that the ambit of regional metamorphic petrology may be much wider than currently visualized. Just as precursor-derived oxides, carbonates, sulphates, graphite, pyrite, etc., of high-grade metasedimentary rocks may give clear indications concerning the nature and environments of formation of the original sediments, so the metamorphic silicates may yield subtle insights into palaeoprovenance, palaeogeography, palaeoclimate and a variety of weathering, volcanic alteration, sea-floor hydrothermal and other regimes. The application of metamorphic mineralogy and mineral chemistry to the search for stratiform ores in metamorphosed terranes may constitute one of the major advances in mineral exploration in the near future. It appears that there is considerable scope for further searching for possible precursor material in a variety of rocks and modern sediments (especially those of the present-day volcanic-sedimentary milieu), extension of clay and mixed-layer clay-chlorite-zeolite mineral synthesis in low-temperature-pressure laboratory experiment, and for the investigation of the behaviour of these synthetic products at metamorphic temperatures and pressures.


1988 ◽  
Vol 25 (11) ◽  
pp. 1751-1759 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. W. Davis ◽  
J. R. Bartlett

U–Pb analyses of zircon and titanite were carried out on eight rocks from the Belmont Lake Metavolcanic Complex, a volcano-sedimentary sequence in the Central Metasedimentary Belt of the Grenville Province of southeastern Ontario. The ages of concordant supracrustal rocks within the complex do not accord with stratigraphic position.The youngest volcanic age is [Formula: see text] from a rhyolite near the base of the sequence. The oldest age, [Formula: see text], is from a dacite in the middle. This is overlain by a rhyolite [Formula: see text] in age. A rhyolite at the top of the sequence appears to contain zircon inherited from a source about 1870 Ma old. The complex is therefore interpreted as comprising a lithotectonic sequence composed of structurally interleaved segments of contrasting age. Tectonic emplacement of these segments was most likely along previously unrecognized thrust faults.The supracrustal rocks were subjected to at least two major deformational events as well as a late metamorphism. The earliest event was probably associated with thrusting. The age of the youngest volcanic unit, [Formula: see text], is an upper age estimate for this event. A lower estimate is probably given by the age of the Cordova Gabbro, 1242 ± 3 Ma. The later event, including peak regional metamorphism, should be younger than [Formula: see text], the age of a sheared, recrystallized felsic sill intruded into the supracrustal rocks, and older than [Formula: see text], the age of the undeformed and unmetamorphosed Belmont Granite.Titanite fractions in the Belmont Granite and a volcanic andesite both give an age of 1071 ± 5 Ma. The age from titanite in the Belmont Granite may be due to thermal resetting during slow cooling. Titanite in the andesite is secondary and may have grown as a result of late metamorphic reactions.The youngest age measured, 1039 ± 5 Ma, is from a concordant analysis of a single zircon grain found within the oldest rhyolite. This may be an example of zircon growth from low-temperature, late-metamorphic fluids.


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