3 research outputs found
Prograde and retrograde metamorphic fabrics - a key for understanding burial and exhumation in orogens (Bohemian Massif)
International audienceIn the Orlica-Snieznik Dome (NE Bohemian massif), alternating belts of orthogneiss with high-pressure rocks and belts of mid-crustal metasedimentary-metavolcanic rocks commonly display a dominant subvertical fabric deformed into a subhorizontal foliation. The first macroscopic foliation is subvertical, strikes NE-SW and is heterogeneously folded by open to isoclinal folds with subhorizontal axial planes parallel to the heterogeneously developed flat-lying foliation. The metamorphic evolution of the mid-crustal metasedimentary rocks involved successive crystallization of chlorite-muscovite-ilmenite-plagioclase-garnet, followed by staurolite-bearing and then kyanite-bearing assemblages in the subvertical fabric. This was followed by garnet retrogression, with syntectonic crystallization of sillimanite and andalusite parallel to the shallow-dipping foliation. Elsewhere, andalusite and cordierite statically overgrew the flat-lying fabric. With reference to a P-T pseudosection for a representative sample, the prograde succession of mineral assemblages and the garnet zoning pattern with decreasing grossular, spessartine and X-Fe are compatible with a P-T path from 3.5-5 kbar/490-520 degrees C to peak conditions of 6-7 kbar/similar to 630 degrees C suggesting burial from 12 to 25 km with increasing temperature. Using the same pseudosection, the retrograde succession of minerals shows decompression to sillimanite stability at similar to 4 kbar/similar to 630 degrees C and to andalusite-cordierite stability at 2-3 kbar indicating exhumation from 25 km to around 9-12 km. Subsequent exhumation to similar to 6 km occurred without apparent formation of a deformation fabric. The structure and petrology together with the spatial distribution of the metasedimentary-metavolcanic rocks, and gneissic and high-pressure belts are compatible with a model of burial of limited parts of the upper and middle crust in narrow cusp-like synclines, synchronous with the exhumation of orogenic lower crust represented by the gneissic and high-pressure rocks in lobe-shaped and volumetrically more important anticlines. Converging P-T-D paths for the metasedimentary rocks and the adjacent high-pressure rocks are due to vertical exchanges between cold and hot vertically moving masses. Finally, the retrograde shallow-dipping fabric affects both the metasedimentary-metavolcanic rocks and the gneissic and high-pressure rocks, and indicates that the similar to 15-km exhumation was mostly accommodated by heterogeneous ductile thinning associated with unroofing of a buoyant crustal root
