6533b82efe1ef96bd12945ab

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Time of formation and peak of Variscan HP-HT metamorphism of quartz-feldspar rocks in the central Erzgebirge, Saxony, Germany

Arne P. WillnerAlfred Kröner

subject

GeophysicsGeochemistry and PetrologyMetamorphic rockGeochemistryMetamorphismEclogiteGranuliteProtolithGeologyPhengiteGneissZircon

description

The Variscan Erzgebirge represents an antiform with a core of gneisses and mica schists, surrounded by a phyllitic mantle. The Gneiss-Eclogite Unit (GEU), in the central part, is a composite tectonometamorphic assemblage characterized by a HP-HT imprint and comprises migmatitic para- and orthogneisses, HT mylonites, HP granulites, eclogites and garnet peridotites. It is tectonically sandwiched between two major units with distinctly lower PT histories. The GEU experienced a characteristic “kinked” retrograde PT path after HP-HT equilibration with: (1) strong near-isothermal decompression at high temperatures; (2) extensive re-equilibration at medium pressures, followed (3) by rapid cooling during continued uplift. We dated zircons (Pb-Pb evaporation) from granitoid orthogneisses and metapelites of the GEU. The orthogneisses contain euhedral, long-prismatic zircons of igneous origin that provided protolith ages between 470 and 524 Ma. Metapelites retain well-preserved granulite-facies mineral assemblages and contain spherical, multifaceted metamorphic zircons that grew near the peak of HP/HT metamorphism. Inclusions of prograde HP phengite (∼15 kbar) and rutile are included in one such zircon. Metamorphic zircons of three samples from different localities yielded identical 207Pb/206Pb ages of 340.5 ± 0.7 Ma, 341.2 ± 0.5 Ma and 341.6 ± 0.5 Ma respectively. Consideration of these zircon ages with published 39Ar/40Ar white mica ages suggests fast cooling and uplift rates in excess of 50 °C/Ma and 4 km/Ma. This is typical for large-scale extensional tectonic unroofing of the ultra-deep part of a fossil, thickened Variscan continental crust (>60 km) during continuing continental collision and orogenic collapse.

https://doi.org/10.1007/s004100050401