Diamond from the Dabie Shan Metamorphic Rocks and Its Implication for Tectonic Setting

Science ◽  
1992 ◽  
Vol 256 (5053) ◽  
pp. 80-82 ◽  
Author(s):  
X. Shutong ◽  
S. Wen ◽  
L. Yican ◽  
J. Laili ◽  
J. Shouyuan ◽  
...  

The uplift of high- P -low- T metamorphic rocks has been attributed to buoyancy, diapirism, or hydrodynamically driven return flow. Buoyancy forces can return material subducted into the mantle only if subduction slows or ceases, reducing the downward traction. The buoyancy forces will be reversed within the crust, because of the increased density of high- P assemblages, and therefore can not cause the subducted material to rise beyond the base of the crust. Diapirism and hydrodynamic flow processes require a low-density, low-viscosity matrix, and can only explain the emplacement of relatively small bodies of high- P rock entrained in the flowing material. The tectonic setting of coherent regional high- P —low- T terrains can be explained in terms of the mechanical behaviour of an accretionary wedge with negligible yield strength, where underplating is the dominant mode of accretion. Underplating thickens the wedge from beneath and increases its surface slope. This causes the upper part of the wedge to extend horizontally, even though convergence is continuing. Continued underplating beneath and extension above can allow the oldest high- P rocks to rise to within reach of a moderate amount of erosion on a time scale of the order of 10 Ma. As long as subduction continues beneath the wedge, the geothermal gradient will not relax to a normal value. This process explains (a) the evidence that high- P -low- T rocks are commonly uplifted while convergence is continuing; (b) the absence in many cases of significant overprinting by higher- T assemblages; (c) the position of the oldest and highest pressure rocks in the upper rear of orogenic wedges; (d) the lack of adequate tectonic thicknesses of overlying rock to explain the metamorphism; and (e) the common occurrence of post-metamorphic faults that excise parts of the metamorphic zonation.


2020 ◽  
Vol 50 ◽  
pp. 23-44
Author(s):  
Boldbaatar Dolzodmaa ◽  
Yasuhito Osanai ◽  
Nobuhiko Nakano ◽  
Tatsuro Adachi

The Central Asian Orogenic Belt had been formed by amalgamation of voluminous subduction–accretionary complexes during the Late Neoproterozoic to the Mesozoic period. Mongolia is situated in the center of this belt. This study presents new zircon U–Pb geochronological, whole-rock major and trace element data for granitoids within central Mongolia and discusses the tectonic setting and evolution of these granitic magmas during their formation and emplacement. The zircon U–Pb ages indicate that the magmatism can be divided into three stages: the 564–532 Ma Baidrag granitoids, the 269–248 and 238–237 Ma Khangai granitoids. The 564–532 Ma Baidrag granitoids are adakitic, have an I-type affinity, and were emplaced into metamorphic rocks. In comparison, the 269–248 Ma granitoids have high-K, calc-alkaline, granodioritic compositions and are I-type granites, whereas the associated the 238–237 Ma granites have an A-type affinity. The 564–532 Ma Baidrag and 269–248 Ma Khangai granitoids also both have volcanic arc-type affinities, whereas the 238–237 Ma granites formed in a post-collisional tectonic setting. These geochronological and geochemical results suggest that arc magmatism occurred at the 564–532 Ma which might be the oldest magmatic activity in central Mongolia. Between the Baidrag and the Khangai, there might be paleo-ocean and the oceanic plate subducted beneath the Khangai and produced voluminous granite bodies during the 269–248 Ma. After the closure of the paleo-ocean, the post collisional granitoids were formed at the 238–237 Ma based on the result of later granitoids in the Khangai area.


Rewarding insights into major crustal lineaments come from the integrated study of well exposed examples. One is the Kyrenia Range, a narrow arcuate lineament of several hundred kilometres in length comprising northern Cyprus and its offshore extension. The Kyrenia Range consists mostly of Mesozoic and Tertiary sedimentary and subordinate volcanic and metamorphic rocks, disposed in four rock groups separated by unconformities recording deformation events. The lineament is dominated by a steeply dipping composite thrust pile located partly along, and partly straddling, the abrupt northward termination of crust similar to the Troodos Igneous Complex at depth. The 200 Ma history of the lineament involved episodic rift, passive-margin, active-margin, strike-slip and uplift phases. The area was rifted off Gondwana in the late Triassic to form a southerly Turkish microcontinent capped by a gently subsiding carbonate platform. After formation of a small ocean basin to the south during the Cretaceous (Troodos ocean), northward subduction began (?Santonian). The first major deformation (D1) is attributed to pervasive (?dextral) strike-slip, which removed the Mesozoic passive margin and brecciated and metamorphosed the remaining platform. In the Maastrichtian and early Tertiary the area subsided and scree breccias were shed from scarps into pelagic carbonate-depositing seas, while bimodal within-plate-type lavas were erupted in an extensional setting influenced by strike-slip. By mid Eocene time, shortening, first evidence by flysch and olistostrome deposition, culminated in strong southward thrusting (D2) and localized metamorphism. Northward subduction south of Cyprus ensued and the range lay in an extensional fore-arc setting in late Eocene and Miocene time. The area then subsided dramatically and accumulated thick turbidite sequences derived from eroding Tauride Mountain areas to the northeast. Faulting and general uplift in the late Miocene was followed by renewed compressional deformation climaxing in mid Pliocene time (D3) with large-scale thrusting and tilting. Pulsed vertical uplift continued through the Quaternary. Similar volcanic and metamorphic rocks formed along the Kyrenia Lineament at intervals. Sedimentary rocks emerge as the most sensitive tectonic setting indicators. Long-lived lineaments like the Kyrenia Range are inherently very complicated, and perceived simple solutions in other cases should be viewed with some scepticism.


2015 ◽  
Vol 2 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Sugeng Sapto Surjono ◽  
Shafeea Leman

Low grade metamorphic rocks including slate, phyllite, metasandstone with subordinate schist and quartzite are widely distributed in the East Johor, Peninsular Malaysia. Regionally, this rock unit is extended northward up to northern Terengganu area. The protolith of this rocks unit were deposited in shallow marine depositional environment that subsequently metamorphosed during Carboniferous time. The very thick argillaceous and arenaceous rocks more than 5000 metres were produced by fast rate accommodation spaces due to global sea level rise during Early to Late Carboniferous against with high fine-grained sediment supply. Tectonic setting, basin formation and sedimentation processes were controlled by rifting of Indochina-East Malaya continental block from Gondwanaland during Devonian to Late Carboniferous. This rifting formed basins within a passive margin tectonic setting along the western margin of Indochina-East Malaya continental block.Keywords: Metamorphic rocks, shallow marine, Carboniferous, passive margin


Geofluids ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 2019 ◽  
pp. 1-17
Author(s):  
Francesco Italiano ◽  
Pietro Bonfanti ◽  
Salvatore Roberto Maugeri

Investigations carried out over the southernmost portion of the Apennine chain (Nebrodi-Peloritani Mountains, Sicily, Italy) reveal a close connection between the tectonic setting and the regional degassing of CO2-dominated volatiles. The geochemical features of the collected gases show that the pristine composition has been modified by gas-water interaction (GWI) and degassing processes. The 3He/4He isotopic ratio in the range of 0.7-2.8 Ra highlights variable contributions of mantle-derived helium, representing an unusual feature for the crustal regime of the study areas characterized by the widespread presence of 4He-producer metamorphic rocks. The degassing of mantle helium is coherent with the tectonics and related to the NW-SE extensional regime of the Calabro-Peloritan Arc (CPA). We propose that the degassing regime as well as the geochemical features of both the dissolved and bubbling gases is closely connected to the strain accumulation rate, inducing almost no temporal changes and insignificant deep-originated fluid contributions to the locked fault volumes. Investigations including discrete and continuous monitoring and degassing-rate estimations are useful tools to gain a better insight into the evolution of seismogenesis, considering the fault rupture as the final stage of a seismic cycle.


2019 ◽  
Vol 157 (1) ◽  
pp. 101-118 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael P. Searle ◽  
Thomas N. Lamont

AbstractMetamorphic core complexes (MCCs) are interpreted as domal structures exposing ductile deformed high-grade metamorphic rocks in the core underlying a ductile-to-brittle high-strain detachment that experienced tens of kilometres of normal sense displacement in response to lithospheric extension. Extension is supposedly the driving force that has governed exhumation. However, numerous core complexes, notably Himalayan, Karakoram and Pamir domes, occur in wholly compressional environments and are not related to lithospheric extension. We suggest that many MCCs previously thought to form during extension are instead related to compressional tectonics. Pressures of kyanite-and sillimanite-grade rocks in the cores of many of these domes are c. 10–14 kbar, approximating to exhumation from depths of c. 35–45 km, too great to be accounted for solely by isostatic uplift. The evolution of high-grade metamorphic rocks is driven by crustal thickening, shortening, regional Barrovian metamorphism, isoclinal folding and ductile shear in a compressional tectonic setting prior to regional extension. Extensional fabrics commonly associated with all these core complexes result from reverse flow along an orogenic channel (channel flow) following peak metamorphism beneath a passive roof stretching fault. In Naxos, low-angle normal faults associated with regional Aegean extension cut earlier formed compressional folds and metamorphic fabrics related to crustal shortening and thickening. The fact that low-angle normal faults exist in both extensional and compressional tectonic settings, and can actively slip at low angles (< 30°), suggests that a re-evaluation of the Andersonian mechanical theory that requires normal faults to form and slip only at high angles (c. 60°) is needed.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document