scholarly journals Two-stage exhumation of subducted Saxothuringian continental crust records underplating in the subduction channel and collisional forced folding (Krkonoše-Jizera Mts., Bohemian Massif)

2016 ◽  
Vol 89 ◽  
pp. 214-229 ◽  
Author(s):  
Petr Jeřábek ◽  
Jiří Konopásek ◽  
Eliška Žáčková
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alessia Borghini ◽  
Silvio Ferrero ◽  
Patrick J. O'Brien ◽  
Bernd Wunder ◽  
Oscar Laurent

<p>Melt inclusions of very unusual nature occur in garnets of eclogites of the Granulitgebirge, Bohemian Massif. This is one of the first direct characterization of a preserved metasomatic melt responsible for the formation of eclogites enclosed in garnet peridotites. The inclusions are micrometric, from glassy to fully crystalized as nanogranitoids and randomly distributed in the garnet core. Nanogranitoids contain kumdykolite/albite, phlogopite, osumilite and kokchetavite with a variable amount of quartz, pyroxene, carbonate and rare white mica. The melt has a granitic composition rather than basaltic or tonalitic/trondhjemitic as would be expected from the partial melting of ultramafic or mafic rocks and it is as well hydrous and peraluminous. The trace elements composition is also unusual for melts in mantle rocks with elements typical of continental crust (Cs, Li, B, Pb and Rb) and subduction zone (Th and U). Similar signatures, i.e. continental crust and subduction, are visible also in the whole rock trace elements in the form of high amounts of LILE and U. The eclogite major elements composition is similar to a Ca- and Fe - rich mafic rock akin more to the crust than to the mantle.</p><p>The peculiar melt composition and the lack of a clear residue of a melting reaction in the eclogites suggest that this melt is external, i.e. metasomatic. It infiltered the peridotites during subduction of the continental crust at mantle depth and aided the transformation of basic layers, already in the peridotite, to eclogite. In addition, similar trace elements patterns to the melt reported here can be found in the so-called durbachite -ultrapotassic melanosyenite present in the high-grade Variscan basement- and in the garnet peridotites and garnet pyroxenites of the T-7 borehole. In both case metasomatism was suggested but the agent was just inferred based on the geochemical signature. All these occurrences suggest that mantle contaminated by melts from deeply subducted continental crust is widespread beneath the Bohemian Massif.</p>


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pavel Rekant ◽  
Oleg Petrov

<p>Base on thorough interpretation of Russian seismic reflection data the sedimentary architecture of Amundsen and Nansen basins was studied. Accordingly, we infer four development stages of the Eurasian Basin (EB) sedimentary system, caused by tectonic evolution of the region.</p><p><strong>Continental break-up stage I</strong> ~120-56 MA leads to formation of 120-130 km wide synrift basins both in the Eastern Amundsen and in the Western Nansen basins. Both basins were floored by extremely extended continental crust. Therefore, the hypothesized continent-ocean boundary (COB) should be placed at the seaward edges of synrift portions of Amundsen and Nansen basins, roughly along the magnetic anomaly #20.</p><p><strong>Spreading</strong> <strong>stage II</strong> (56-34 MA) was characterized by seafloor spreading in the EB as low as 8 mm/year, which was accompanied by expansion of the Amundsen and Nansen sedimentary basins up to their current sizes. The successive expansion of the sedimentary basins which is characteristic of the seafloor spreading basin, was revealed from the architecture of only this sequence, neither underlying nor overlapping. We propose the formation of a Gakkel Ridge rift valley and its infilling with thick sediments sequence during this stage.</p><p><strong>Synoceanic</strong> <strong>stage III</strong> (34-~3 MA) was resulted in the accumulation of the undisturbed Oligocene-Quaternary sediment sequence all over the entire EB. If the non-tectonized architecture of this sequence indicates a calm tectonic regime for the most of the Oligocene-Miocene, the existence of the sediment veneer all over the entire EB proves that sedimentation basin and consequently the oceanic crust domain of modern size were already formed by the beginning of Oligocene.</p><p><strong>Re-spreading stage IV (~3-0 MA)</strong> is characterized by the resumption of seafloor spreading in the Gakkel Ridge axial zone by propagation of the oceanic rift from Norwegian-Greenland basin toward the east.  </p><p>The proposed model of two-stage seafloor spreading in the EB allows us to explain most of the geological issues in this region and is of perfect relation to the known tectonic events along the Arctic periphery.</p><p>In particular: (1) thick sediments sequence in the Eastern and Central (e.g.  at 94°E by Rekant & Gusev, 2016)  Gakkel Ridge rift valley could be explained by the Eocene age of the rift valley, (2) recent spreading resumption could be considered as the cause of the unpredictable high both the hydrothermal activity and volcanism at the Western Gakkel Ridge, (3) the consolidated sand- and siltstones, dredged from the seamount scarp in the middle part of Amundsen Basin (Gaedicke et al., 2019), which thought to be fragments of Mesozoic continental crust, confirm the suggested COB position along magnetic anomaly No.20, (4) the eastward propagation of the ocean rifting along the Gakkel Ridge leads to apparent change of the accentuated high relief morphology of the Western Gakkel Ridge to a smoother ridge morphology of the Eastern Gakkel Ridge as well as to defocusing seismicity at the Eurasia Basin– Laptev Sea transition.</p><p> </p>


Author(s):  
Meghan R Guild ◽  
Christy B Till ◽  
Tomoyuki Mizukami ◽  
Simon Wallis

Abstract Recycling of ultramafic lower crustal cumulates via delamination or foundering is often invoked as a mechanism to return mafic material to the mantle during continental crust formation. These recycled pieces of the lower crust are rarely sampled but are preserved in several locations including the Kohistan and Talkeetna arc sections, Sierra Nevada and Colorado Plateau pyroxenite xenoliths and, as discussed here for the first time, the exhumed Higashi-Akaishi (HA) ultramafic body in Japan. The HA is located in the Besshi region of the Sanbagawa metamorphic belt in southwestern Japan and is dominantly composed of dunite with lesser garnet pyroxenite and harzburgite lenses. Although the petrogenetic history of the HA body is still debated, our new bulk major and trace element compositions, radiogenic isotope data, as well as petrologic and field observations, are consistent with a lower crustal cumulate origin for the HA dunite and pyroxenite, with a later slab-derived fluid overprint. Clinopyroxene and olivine in the foliated HA dunite have compositions consistent with ultramafic cumulates with high Mg#s (Mg# clinopyroxene = 0·94, Mg# olivine = 0·88), high NiO in olivine (∼0·26 wt %) and low-Al clinopyroxene. In addition, the bulk major element chemistry of the HA dunite and garnet pyroxenite follow systematic behavior in Mg# vs SiO2 wt %, similar to those observed in other lower crustal cumulate lithologies and corresponding intrusive lithologies, pointing to different liquid lines of descent for the corresponding melts. Our new thermobarometric estimates (peak pressure–temperature at 2·6 GPa, 713ºC) are consistent with a hot slab surface subduction path, rather than the lower crustal temperatures recorded in arc sections (Kohistan & Talkeetna: 1 GPa, 800ºC). A pervasive slab-fluid influence is also indicated in the HA lithologies by LREE and Ce enrichments and strong Nb and Zr depletions. The trace elements and the pressure–temperature estimates, as well as the thermodynamic modeling results necessitate removal of the HA body from the lower crust and incorporation into cooler portions of a mantle wedge. At lower crustal conditions, the bulk density of the HA lithologies is greater than the background mantle, indicating the feasibility of lower crustal foundering into a mantle wedge where the HA was incorporated in the subduction channel to reach its peak conditions. Hydration of the HA body while in the subduction channel likely provided the change in density necessary to facilitate its rapid exhumation to the surface. Thus, the HA cumulate likely represents a piece of the subduction system that is rarely preserved, as well as a key component in the compositional evolution of the continental crust.


2014 ◽  
pp. 367-388 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Pertoldová ◽  
M. Košuličová ◽  
K. Verner ◽  
E. Žáčková ◽  
Z. Pertold ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Flor de Lis Mancilla ◽  
Jose Morales ◽  
Antonio Molina-Aguilera ◽  
Daniel Stich ◽  
Jose Miguel Azañon ◽  
...  

<p>We obtain P-wave receiver functions from recordings at a dense seismic broadband transect, deployed along 170 km across the eastern Betic orogen in south Spain. Migrated images show the crustal structure of the orogen in detail. In particular, they reveal the situation of the subducted Iberian paleomargin, with full preservation of the proximal domain and the ~50 km wide necking domain. Crustal thinning affects the lower continental crust. The Variscan crust of the Tethys margin is bending downward beneath the Betics, reaching ~45 km depth, and terminates abruptly at a major slab tear fault. The distal domain of the paleomargin cannot be reconstructed, but the migrated section suggests that material has been exhumed through the subduction channel and integrated into the Betic Orogene. This supports an origin of the HP-LT Nevado-Filabride units from subducted, hyperextended Variscan crust.</p>


Author(s):  
Sengshiu Chung ◽  
Peggy Cebe

We are studying the crystallization and annealing behavior of high performance polymers, like poly(p-pheny1ene sulfide) PPS, and poly-(etheretherketone), PEEK. Our purpose is to determine whether PPS, which is similar in many ways to PEEK, undergoes reorganization during annealing. In an effort to address the issue of reorganization, we are studying solution grown single crystals of PPS as model materials.Observation of solution grown PPS crystals has been reported. Even from dilute solution, embrionic spherulites and aggregates were formed. We observe that these morphologies result when solutions containing uncrystallized polymer are cooled. To obtain samples of uniform single crystals, we have used two-stage self seeding and solution replacement techniques.


2007 ◽  
Vol 177 (4S) ◽  
pp. 121-121
Author(s):  
Antonio Dessanti ◽  
Diego Falchetti ◽  
Marco Iannuccelli ◽  
Susanna Milianti ◽  
Gian P. Strusi ◽  
...  
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2007 ◽  
Vol 177 (4S) ◽  
pp. 120-120
Author(s):  
Pamela I. Ellsworth ◽  
Anthony Caldamone
Keyword(s):  

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