scholarly journals Timing of Paleozoic Exhumation and Deformation of the High-Pressure Vestgӧtabreen Complex at the Motalafjella Nunatak, Svalbard

Minerals ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (2) ◽  
pp. 125 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christopher J. Barnes ◽  
Katarzyna Walczak ◽  
Emilie Janots ◽  
David Schneider ◽  
Jarosław Majka

The Vestgӧtabreen Complex exposed in the Southwestern Caledonian Basement Province of Svalbard comprises two Caledonian high-pressure units. In situ white mica 40Ar/39Ar and monazite Th-U-total Pb geochronology has resolved the timing of the tectonic evolution of the complex. Cooling of the Upper Unit during exhumation occurred at 476 ± 2 Ma, shortly after eclogite-facies metamorphism. The two units were juxtaposed at 454 ± 6 Ma. This was followed by subaerial exposure and deposition of Bullbreen Group sediments. A 430–400 Ma late Caledonian phase of thrusting associated with major sinistral shearing throughout Svalbard deformed both the complex and the overlying sediments. This phase of thrusting is prominently recorded in the Lower Unit, and is associated with a pervasive greenschist-facies metamorphic overprint of high-pressure lithologies. A c. 365–344 Ma geochronological record may represent an Ellesmerian tectonothermal overprint. Altogether, the geochronological evolution of the Vestgӧtabreen Complex, with previous petrological and structural studies, suggests that it may be a correlative to the high-pressure Tsäkkok Lens in the Scandinavian Caledonides. It is suggested that the Vestgӧtabreen Complex escaped to the periphery of the orogen along the sinistral strike-slip shear zones prior to, or during the initial stages of continental collision between Baltica and Laurentia.

1996 ◽  
Vol 33 (5) ◽  
pp. 800-810 ◽  
Author(s):  
Edward D. Ghent ◽  
Philippe Erdmer ◽  
Douglas A. Archibald ◽  
Mavis Z. Stout

A blueschist and eclogite terrane is associated with one of the largest faults in the Canadian Cordilleran Orogen, the Pinchi fault. Blueschists (in situ) and retrogressed eclogite blocks occur along the Pinchi fault zone near 54°30'N and 124°W. Critical blueschist facies mineral assemblages include lawsonite–glaucophane, jadeite–lawsonite–glaucophane–quartz, and aragonite. White mica 40Ar/39Ar spectra on blueschist and eclogite yield ages in the range 221.8 ± 1.9 to 223.5 ± 1.7 Ma, establishing a direct link between the blueschists and eclogites. Preservation of aragonite sets rigid constraints on the pressure–temperature–fluid–time conditions of unroofing. K–Ar dates indicate that this is some of the oldest documented metamorphic aragonite. Comparison with computed petrogenetic grids suggests that metamorphic temperatures were in the range 200–300 °C, with pressures greater than 8–10 kbar (1 kbar = 100 MPa). Unroofing likely occurred during collision of the Cache Creek terrane with Quesnellia in the Late Triassic to Middle Jurassic. The fault was initiated as a plate boundary and was active as late as Eocene time as a strike-slip zone. The Pinchi blueschist terrane is similar to others in the North American Cordillera and highlights a tectonic regime of repeated blueschist metamorphism and rapid unroofing along many parts of the western margin of North America in the early Mesozoic.


Solid Earth ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 11 (2) ◽  
pp. 437-467 ◽  
Author(s):  
Emmanuelle Ricchi ◽  
Christian A. Bergemann ◽  
Edwin Gnos ◽  
Alfons Berger ◽  
Daniela Rubatto ◽  
...  

Abstract. Thorium–lead (Th-Pb) crystallization ages of hydrothermal monazites from the western, central and eastern Tauern Window provide new insights into Cenozoic tectonic evolution of the Tauern metamorphic dome. Growth domain crystallization ages range from 21.7 ± 0.4 to 10.0 ± 0.2 Ma. Three major periods of monazite growth are recorded between ∼ 22–20 (peak at 21 Ma), 19–15 (major peak at 17 Ma) and 14–10 Ma (major peak around 12 Ma), respectively, interpreted to be related to prevailing N–S shortening, in association with E–W extension, beginning strike-slip movements and reactivation of strike-slip faulting. Fissure monazite ages largely overlap with zircon and apatite fission track data. Besides tracking the thermal evolution of the Tauern dome, monazite dates reflect episodic tectonic movement along major shear zones that took place during the formation of the dome. Geochronological and structural data from the Pfitschtal area in the western Tauern Window show the existence of two cleft generations separated in time by 4 Ma and related to strike-slip to oblique-slip faulting. Moreover, these two phases overprint earlier phases of fissure formation. Highlights. In situ dating of hydrothermal monazite-(Ce). New constraints on the exhumation of the Tauern metamorphic dome. Distinct tectonic pulses recorded from east to west.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Emmanuelle Ricchi ◽  
Christian A. Bergemann ◽  
Edwin Gnos ◽  
Alfons Berger ◽  
Daniela Rubatto ◽  
...  

Abstract. Thorium-Pb crystallization ages of hydrothermal monazites from the western, central and eastern Tauern Window provide new insights into Cenozoic tectonic evolution of the Tauern metamorphic dome. Growth domain crystallization ages range from 22.3 ± 0.6 Ma to 7.7 ± 0.9 Ma. Three major periods of monazite growth are recorded between ~ 22–19 (peak at 21 Ma), 19–15 (major peak at 17 Ma) and 13–8 Ma (major peaks at 12, 10 and 8 Ma), respectively interpreted to be related to prevailing N-S shortening, in association with E-W extension, beginning strike-slip movements, and reactivation of strike-slip faulting. Fissure monazite ages largely overlap with zircon and apatite fission tracks data. Besides tracking the thermal evolution of the Tauern dome, monazite dates reflect episodic tectonic movement along major shear zones that took place during the formation of the dome. Geochronological and structural data from the Pfitschtal area in the western Tauern Window show the existence of two cleft generations separated in time by 4 Ma and related to strike-slip to oblique-slip faulting. Moreover, these two phases overprint earlier phases of fissure formation.


Tectonics ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 39 (12) ◽  
Author(s):  
Alexandre Beaudoin ◽  
Stéphane Scaillet ◽  
Nicolas Mora ◽  
Laurent Jolivet ◽  
Romain Augier

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Francesco Giuntoli ◽  
Giulio Viola

<p>Exhumation of subducted high-pressure units is favoured by relatively narrow, high-strain shear zones, where most metamorphic and deformational processes occur. Unfortunately, these are commonly overprinted and/or partly or fully obliterated along the exhumation path by younger fabrics or by metamorphic re-equilibration. Their identification and characterization are, therefore, of primary importance when aiming at reconstructing the deepest (and thus earliest) tectonometamorphic history of high-pressure crustal units.</p><p>The Northern Apennines (Italy) offer the opportunity to study a unique setting where continental units (Tuscan Metamorphic Units) were subducted to high-pressure conditions and then exhumed and juxtaposed against non-metamorphic units (Tuscan Nappe). We have studied a well exposed section in the Monticiano-Roccastrada Unit of the Mid Tuscan Ridge (MTR), where a mesoscopic (~20 m length and 5 m high) compressional duplex deforms the Palaeozoic-Triassic quartz-rich metasandstones, metaconglomerates and minor metapelites of the Monte Quoio - Montagnola Senese Unit with a top-to-the-NE sense of shear (Arenarie di Poggio al Carpino Formation; Casini et al., 2007).</p><p>Our approach is based on detailed fieldwork, microstructural and petrological investigations. Field observations reveal severe strain partitioning within the duplex between metapelite levels, corresponding to 10-50 cm thick high-strain zones, and metasandstone levels, which form relatively strain-free metric horses. Early generations of quartz veins are highly transposed (sheath folds occur) parallel to the metapelitic high-strain shear zones. Veins are composed of iso-oriented quartz, forming up to several centimetre long single-grain ribbons, Mg-carpholite (XMg~ 0.65) needles and K-white mica marking the stretching lineation. Carpholite in the transposed veins invariably defines the stretching direction of shear zones. These high-P veins coexist with a later generation of less deformed, oblique quartz veins. The mylonitic foliation in the metapelites is defined by quartz, chloritoid, pyrophyllite and K-white mica forming a stretching lineation coherent with the one visible in the veins. Geometrical, cross-cutting and petrographic relations suggest that there has occurred cyclic deformation between brittle and viscous conditions, with the veins forming broadly syn-mylonitic shearing. Thermodynamic modeling results suggest >0.8 GPa and ~350°C for the formation of both the high-pressure veins and the mylonitic foliation.</p><p>Shear zones were subsequently folded about the NNW-SSE axis of the regional antiform associated with the MTR. Later brittle overprinting is represented by quart-filled tension gashes and localized C’ planes, mostly within the more competent metasandstone levels, indicating top-to-the-SW reactivation. In summary, our results suggest a cyclic brittle-ductile behaviour occurring at high pressure conditions. This could potentially reflect the repeated alternation between aseismic creep (viscous) and coseismic slip (brittle) during the first stages of the exhumation history of this portion of the northern Apennines, from lower to middle crustal levels in a compressional top-to-the-NE setting. Dating of K-white mica is ongoing to constrain the geodynamic scenario of such shear zone.</p><p> </p><p>Casini, G., Decandia, F.A., Tavarnelli, E., 2007. Analysis of a mesoscopic duplex in SW Tuscany, Italy: implications for thrust system development during positive tectonic inversion. Geol. Soc. London, Spec. Publ. 272, 437–446.</p><p> </p>


2011 ◽  
Vol 149 (2) ◽  
pp. 208-220 ◽  
Author(s):  
UWE RING ◽  
ARNE P. WILLNER ◽  
PAUL W. LAYER ◽  
PETER P. RICHTER

AbstractWe describe the geometry and kinematics of a Jurassic to Early Cretaceous transpressive sinistral strike-slip system within a metamorphic basement inlier of the Mesozoic magmatic arc near Bahia Agua Dulce at latitudes 31–32°S in north-central Chile and discuss possible relations with the Atacama Fault System further north. Sinistral transpression overprints structures of an accretionary system that is represented by the metamorphic basement. Sub-vertical semi-ductile NNW-striking strike-slip shear zones are the most conspicuous structures. Chlorite and sericite grew, and white mica and quartz dynamically recrystallized, suggesting low-grade metamorphic conditions during semi-ductile deformation. Folds at the 10–100 metre scale developed before and during strike-slip shearing. The folds are deforming a former sub-horizontal transposition foliation that originated during prior accretion processes. The folds have axes sub-parallel to the strike-slip shear zones and sub-vertical axial surfaces indicating a component of shortening parallel to the shear-zone boundaries, suggesting an overall transpressive deformation regime. Transpressive strike-slip deformation also affects Middle Triassic (Anisian) basal breccias of the El Quereo Formation.40Ar–39Ar laser ablation ages of synkinematically recrystallized white mica in one of the shear zones provide an age of 174–165 Ma for the waning stages of semi-ductile strike-slip shearing. The semi-ductile shear zones are cut by mafic and rhyolite dykes. Two rhyolite dykes yield40Ar–39Ar ages of 160.5 ± 1.7 Ma and 131.9 ± 1.7 Ma, respectively. The latter dyke has been affected by brittle faulting. Fault-slip analysis shows that the kinematics of the faulting event is similar to the one of the semi-ductile shearing event, suggesting that sinistral transpression continued after ~130 Ma. Timing, kinematics and geographic position suggest that the shear zones at Bahia Agua Dulce represent a southern continuation of the prominent Atacama Fault System that affected the Jurassic/Early Cretaceous arc over its ~1400 km length.


2020 ◽  
Vol 50 (1) ◽  
pp. 337-349 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael B. Stephens ◽  
Ulf Bergström ◽  
Carl-Henric Wahlgren

AbstractThe 1.1–0.9 Ga Sveconorwegian orogen in southwestern Scandinavia belongs to the global system of mountain belts established during the assembly of the supercontinent Rodinia. An overall north–south structural trend and five lithotectonic units bounded by crustal-scale shear zones characterize this orogen. In Sweden, the Eastern Segment abuts the orogen's cratonic foreland eastwards and is separated from the Idefjorden terrane westwards by a ductile shear zone, up to 5 km thick, displaying a sinistral transpressive component. These two lithotectonic units differ on the basis of their pre-Sveconorwegian accretionary tectonic evolution, and the timing of Sveconorwegian high-pressure metamorphism, anatexis and polyphase deformation. High-pressure granulites and migmatites formed at c. 1.05–1.02 Ga in the Idefjorden terrane; eclogites, high-pressure granulites and migmatites at c. 0.99–0.95 Ga in the Eastern Segment. Magmatic activity and crustal extension progressed westwards at c. 0.98–0.92 Ga. Prior to or at 0.93–0.91 Ga, greenschist facies shear deformation with top-to-the-foreland movement affected the frontal part of the orogen. Geodynamic uncertainties concern the affinity of the Idefjorden terrane relative to Fennoscandia (Baltica), the character of the Sveconorwegian orogenesis, and the contiguous or non-contiguous nature of the erosional fronts of the late Mesoproterozoic–early Neoproterozoic orogens in Sweden and Canada.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Timothy Armitage ◽  
Robert Holdsworth ◽  
Robin Strachan ◽  
Thomas Zach ◽  
Diana Alvarez-Ruiz ◽  
...  

<p>Ductile shear zones are heterogeneous areas of strain localisation which often display variation in strain geometry and combinations of coaxial and non-coaxial deformation. One such heterogeneous shear zone is the c. 2 km thick Uyea Shear Zone (USZ) in northwest Mainland Shetland (UK), which separates variably deformed Neoarchaean orthogneisses in its footwall from Neoproterozoic metasediments in its hanging wall (Fig. a). The USZ is characterised by decimetre-scale layers of dip-slip thrusting and extension, strike-slip sinistral and dextral shear senses and interleaved ultramylonitic coaxially deformed horizons. Within the zones of transition between shear sense layers, mineral lineations swing from foliation down-dip to foliation-parallel in kinematically compatible, anticlockwise/clockwise-rotations on a local and regional scale (Fig. b). Rb-Sr dating of white mica grains via laser ablation indicates a c. 440-425 Ma Caledonian age for dip-slip and strike-slip layers and an 800 Ma Neoproterozoic age for coaxial layers. Quartz opening angles and microstructures suggest an upper-greenschist to lower-amphibolite facies temperature for deformation. We propose that a Neoproterozoic, coaxial event is overprinted by Caledonian sinistral transpression under upper greenschist/lower amphibolite facies conditions. Interleaved kinematics and mineral lineation swings are attributed to result from differential flow rates resulting in vertical and lateral extrusion and indicate regional-scale sinistral transpression during the Caledonian orogeny in NW Shetland. This study highlights the importance of linking geochronology to microstructures in a poly-deformed terrane and is a rare example of a highly heterogeneous shear zone in which both vertical and lateral extrusion occurred during transpression.</p><p><img src="https://contentmanager.copernicus.org/fileStorageProxy.php?f=gepj.0cf6ef44e5ff57820599061/sdaolpUECMynit/12UGE&app=m&a=0&c=d96bb6db75eed0739f2a6ee90c9ad8fd&ct=x&pn=gepj.elif&d=1" alt=""></p>


2000 ◽  
Vol 37 (9) ◽  
pp. 1309-1320 ◽  
Author(s):  
Oscar Talavera Mendoza

Las Ollas complex (LOC) is a subduction complex spatially associated with the early Cretaceous Zihuatanejo-Huetamo subterrane (Guerrero terrane) in southern Mexico. LOC tectonic mélanges compose of a stack of east-dipping, west-vergent tectonic sheets containing blocks of metabasalt, metadolerite, metagabbro, ultramafics, volcaniclastics, quartz-rich sandstone, and chert enveloped in a highly sheared clastic or serpentinitic matrix. Most igneous and igneous-derived metamorphic blocks show geochemical and isotopic features typical of island-arc tholeiitic suites: (i) low TiO2 (0.13 to 0.91%) and Zr (5 to 57 ppm) contents; (ii) high (LFSE/HFSE)N ratios; low LaN/YbN (0.5 to 4) values; and, high εNd(T) (+7.9 to +8.0) ratios. Petrographical and mineral chemistry evidence indicates that blocks underwent early recrystallization under high pressure and low temperature (HP-LT), blueschist facies conditions during subduction. Typical assemblages include blue (sodic through calco-sodic to Na-rich calcic) amphibole + lawsonite ± tremolite ± Mg-chlorite ± white mica ± albite ± quartz. Phase relations and chlorite thermometry suggest temperatures of about 200°-330o C and pressures of 5-7 kbar. It is proposed that sedimentary blocks were generated by in situ remobilization and mixing, whereas igneous blocks most probably derived from the chemically and isotopically identical Zihuatanejo island-arc suite. Our data suggest that LOC represents part of a subduction complex formed by eastward-directed subduction related with the evolution of the early Cretaceous Zihuatanejo island arc.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document