Tectonic stacking of metamorphic zones in Cheticamp River area, Cape Breton Highlands, Nova Scotia

1984 ◽  
Vol 21 (11) ◽  
pp. 1229-1244 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. Craw

Metabasic and quartzo-feldspathic schists and gneisses of the Cheticamp River area can be subdivided into three north–south-trending metamorphic belts. The westernmost belt, the low-grade belt, has been metamorphosed to transitional greenschist–amphibolite facies with development of one penetrative foliation. The central medium-grade belt has been metamorphosed to amphibolite facies with development of two penetrative foliations. The eastern high-grade belt has been metamorphosed to amphibolite facies accompanied by development of strong gneissic segregation and nonanatectic migmatite leucosomes during formation of two penetrative foliations.Deformation has been inhomogeneous in each of these belts. Most rocks in each belt show evidence of post-tectonic porphyroblast growth. However, deformation continued after the metamorphic peak in localized zones. Very high strain occurred in many of these zones during and after the metamorphic peak, so that early formed fold axes were rotated towards the stretching direction. Locally, dynamically recrystallized mylonite has formed. The three belts were juxtaposed under waning metamorphic conditions by relative movement on these high-strain zones. The schist and gneiss complex thus consists of stacked metamorphic zones with the lowest grade rocks lying at the bottom of the stack. Stacking occurred by east to west thrusting of tight macroscopic ductile folds whose lower limbs have been sheared off.There are many lithologic similarities between the three metamorphic belts. The rocks may have been derived from the same protolith and have since been variably deformed and metamorphosed before later juxtaposition. There is no evidence for involvement of an older "basement complex" in the stacking tectonics in the studied area.The schist and gneiss complex has been intruded by post-tectonic plutonic rocks, and locally affected by post-metamorphic brittle deformation.

1979 ◽  
Vol 43 (326) ◽  
pp. 269-278 ◽  
Author(s):  
W. G. Ernst

SummaryCompositions of glaucophanes and actinolite-hornblende solid solutions occurring in chemically similar metabasaltic rocks from blueschist terranes in east-central Shikoku, W. California, Valtournanche (W. Alps), and W. Liguria are compared. Chemical contrasts among coexisting Na and Ca amphibole pairs, which reflect disparate P-T histories under the presumed attendance of local equilibrium, include: Na contents are rather high among barroisitic hornblendes from the western and Ligurian Alps, as well as among high-grade tectonic blocks from California; in contrast, actinolitic amphiboles from both lower-grade Franciscan tectonic blocks and in situ schists and the blueschists of Shikoku are impoverished in Na relative to blue-green hornblendes. Sodic amphiboles contain less than 0. 5 Aliv per formula unit, whereas Alvi is very high; a situation reversed among calcic amphiboles. The Na + Ca contents ofglaucophanes are strongly clustered around the sum of 2.0 (i.e. A site vacant) whereas calcic amphiboles have a wider range with the A site variably occupied. No solvus has been detected within either sodic or calcic amphiboles under blueschist facies conditions. For low-grade metabasaltic parageneses, a miscibility gap separates these two amphibole groups; at relatively high grade such compositions have sodic calcic amphiboles of barroisitic type; this may mean that glaucophane + hornblende assemblages are metastable, accounting for textural relations indicating that the sodic amphibole typically did not grow at the same time as the barroisite. Ti, Mn, and K appear to be concentrated in calcic amphibole compared to coexisting glaucophane, probably in the M2, M4, and A sites, respectively.Contrasts in coexisting amphibole tie lines are thought to be a consequence of the fact that the parageneses of Shikoku and California reflect high P and very high P prograde P-T paths respectively, whereas those from Valtournache and W. Liguria show evidence of decompression recrystallization (or back-reaction) of high P (i.e. eclogitic) protoliths. Comparison of the inferred physical conditions operating during the production of these four contrasting paragenetic sequences allows the provisional assignment of a P-T stability region for barroisitic amphibole in metabasaltic rocks as: P 4–5 kb at c. 350°; P 5–7 kb at c. 450 °C.


2017 ◽  
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N. Bonora ◽  
A. Ruggiero ◽  
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1970 ◽  
Vol 10 (9) ◽  
pp. 370-376 ◽  
Author(s):  
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F. E. Hauser

2003 ◽  
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pp. S39-S47 ◽  
Author(s):  
P Puech ◽  
F Demangeot ◽  
Paulo Sergio Pizani ◽  
V Domnich ◽  
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