Étude pétro-structurale des chevauchements ductiles himalayens sur la transversale de l'Everest–Makalu (Népal oriental)

1986 ◽  
Vol 23 (8) ◽  
pp. 1117-1137 ◽  
Author(s):  
Maurice Brunel ◽  
Jean-Robert Kienast

Tectonic and microtectonic data in eastern Nepal indicate that the major observed thrusting (100 km) on the Main Central Thrust (MCT) postdates the Barrovian metamorphism of the High Himalaya gneisses. This result, at variance with the famous "reverse metamorphism model," better explains the abnormal metamorphic superpositions in the Himalayas and accounts for the lack of high-pressure assemblages under the thick, allochtonous High Himalaya Tibetan slab.Pressure and temperature estimates by microprobe analysis on plagioclase, biotite, garnet, kyanite, sillimanite, and cordierite assemblages are presented for samples collected along the MCT shear zone and across the gneiss slab in the Everest–Makalu area. Since there is very little difference in pressure at the front of the slab (Kathmandu Klippe) and its root, these estimates support the existence of important late metamorphic thrusting. The decrease of pressure towards the top of the gneiss pile, combined with a small temperature increase, explains the kyanite–sillimanite transition. The reverse metamorphism model, which implies refolded isograds, predicts heat loss by conduction throughout the sole of the thrust; pressure–temperature variations and kyanite–sillimanite transition phases more likely reflect a late heat supply in the upper part of the gneisses. Intrusion of leucogranitic bodies, confined to the interface with the Tethyan sediments, could account for this heat supply.A new tectonic evolution model of the Himalayan intracrustal thrusts is discussed. Without completely denying the existence of a reverse metamorphism synchronous with the phases of early shearing, it can be shown that the metamorphic zonation seen at present was governed by the structure of the later shearing.

2015 ◽  
Vol 51 (4) ◽  
pp. 670-681 ◽  
Author(s):  
Vincenzo Festa ◽  
Giacomo Prosser ◽  
Alfredo Caggianelli ◽  
Antonietta Grande ◽  
Antonio Langone ◽  
...  

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.


Lithosphere ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 10 (5) ◽  
pp. 641-661 ◽  
Author(s):  
Eric J. Thiessen ◽  
H. Daniel Gibson ◽  
Daniele Regis ◽  
Sally J. Pehrsson

2008 ◽  
Vol 71 (6) ◽  
pp. 1186-1192 ◽  
Author(s):  
ROSALIND E. ROBERTSON ◽  
TIM CARROLL ◽  
LINDSAY E. PEARCE

Spores of six species (28 strains) of dairy Bacillus isolates were added to sterile reconstituted skim milk and pressure processed (600 MPa for 60 s at 75°C) using either a water-based pressurizing fluid or silicon oil. Processing temperatures peaked at 88 and 90°C, respectively, for both fluids. For all strains, the log inactivation was consistently higher in the silicon oil than in the water-based fluid. This has potential implications for food safety assessment of combined pressure-temperature processes. High pressure processing causes mild heating during pressurization of both the target sample (i.e., spores) and the pressurizing fluid used for pressure delivery. Primarily, the adiabatic heat of compression of the fluids as well as other heat-transfer properties of the fluids and equipment determines the magnitude of this heating. Pressure cycles run with silicon oil were 7 to 15°C higher in temperature during pressurization than pressure cycles run with the water-based pressurizing fluid, due to the greater adiabatic heat of compression of silicon oil. At and around the target pressure, however, the temperatures of both pressurizing fluids were similar, and they both dropped at the same rate during the holding time at the target pressure. We propose that the increased spore inactivation in the silicon oil system can be attributed to additional heating of the spore preparation when pressurized in oil. This could be explained by the temperature difference between the silicon oil and the aqueous spore preparation established during the pressurization phase of the pressure cycle. These spore-inactivation differences have practical implications because it is common practice to develop inactivation kinetic data on small, jacketed laboratory systems pressurized in oil, with extensive heat loss. However, commercial deployment is invariably on large industrial systems pressurized in water, with limited heat loss. Such effects should be considered in food safety assessments of combined pressure-temperature processes.


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