Search results for "Blues"

showing 10 items of 65 documents

Coeval high-pressure metamorphism, thrusting, strike-slip, and extensional shearing in the Tauern Window, Eastern Alps

2008

[1] Recent findings for a young (31.5 ± 0.7 Ma) age of high-pressure metamorphism at ∼90 km depths in the Eclogite Zone of the Tauern Window, Eastern Alps, prompt the question about the timing of the structural development of the Tauern Window and its relation to high-pressure metamorphism. We show that all major structures in the Tauern Window, resulting from strong N-S lithospheric shortening and simultaneous minor E-W extension, began developing coevally with high-pressure metamorphism in the Eclogite Zone. Large-scale strike-slip shear zones started to form at ∼32–30 Ma and facilitated the spatial accommodation of simultaneous shortening and extension. At least some of the strike-slip a…

BlueschistGeophysicsGeochemistry and PetrologyGreenschistGeochemistryMetamorphismShear zoneEclogiteEclogitizationGeologyMetamorphic faciesTranspressionTectonics
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METAMORPHIC EVOLUTION OF SPESSARTINE QUARTZITES (COTICULES) IN THE HIGH-PRESSURE, LOW-TEMPERATURE COMPLEX AT BAHIA MANSA, COASTAL CORDILLERA OF SOUTH…

2001

Lenses of spessartine quartzites (coticules) are associated with greenschist intercalations in coastal exposures at Bahia Mansa within the mainly metapsammopelitic Western Series, which forms most of the basement in the Coastal Cordillera of central to southern Chile. The chemical compositions of the coticules can be explained by protoliths formed from ferriferous and manganiferous hydrothermal precipitates mixed with aluminous alteration-derived material on top of oceanic crust. The peak conditions of metamorphism were calculated with multivariant reactions: 270–370 °C, 6–8 kbar. A retrograde P–T evolution was marked by decompression to 2 kbar during cooling below 300°C, influx of an exter…

BlueschistGreenschistMetamorphic rockGeochemistryMetamorphismEpidoteengineering.materialSpessartinePhengiteGeochemistry and Petrologyvisual_artvisual_art.visual_art_mediumengineeringFluid inclusionsGeologyThe Canadian Mineralogist
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Omphacite textures in eclogites of the Tauern Window: Implications for the exhumation of the Eclogite Zone, Eastern Alps

2008

Abstract We discuss the relationship of omphacite lattice preferred orientation (LPO) patterns in eclogite and kinematic indicators in the matrix surrounding the eclogite during the very rapid exhumation of the deeply buried Eclogite Zone in the Tauern Window of the Eastern Alps. LPO patterns are presented from profiles parallel to the eclogite stretching lineation across the Eclogite Zone. The omphacite textures show symmetric patterns across the entire Eclogite Zone; only in few cases slight asymmetries are observed. The patterns are characterized by an alignment of {110} with the foliation and a maximum of 〈001〉 close to the lineation and are indicative of deformation by intracrystalline…

BlueschistLineationSinistral and dextralMetamorphic rockGeochemistryengineeringGeologyEclogiteOmphaciteengineering.materialGeologyJournal of Structural Geology
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Vertical ductile thinning and its contribution to the exhumation of high-pressure rocks: the Cycladic blueschist unit in the Aegean

2008

The contribution of vertical ductile thinning to the exhumation of high-pressure rocks is evaluated by estimating finite strain in 75 exhumed high-pressure rocks of the Cycladic blueschist unit in the Aegean Sea, Greece, and western Turkey. Strain data indicate heterogeneous deformation; principal stretches are 1.24–5.03 for S X , 0.63–2.53 for S Y and 0.10–0.81 for S Z , with a tensor average of S X : S Y : S Z =1.52:1.28:0.51. A 1D numerical model, which integrates velocity gradients along a vertical flow path with a steady-state orogen, is used to estimate the contribution of ductile thinning of the overburden of the high-pressure rocks to exhumation. Using a strain-rate law that is prop…

BlueschistOverburdenThinningFinite strain theoryHigh pressureFlow (psychology)Vertical flowGeologyDeformation (engineering)PetrologyGeologyJournal of the Geological Society
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How to resist subduction: evidence for large-scale out-of-sequence thrusting during Eocene collision in western Turkey

2001

Significant along-strike variations have locked large parts of the Alpine subduction complex in the Eastern Mediterranean in the Eocene, and defined the end of high-pressure accretion in western Turkey. Structural analysis reveals that the Anatolide belt in western Turkey formed under greenschist facies metamorphic conditions in the Eocene when a high-pressure metamorphic fragment of the Adriatic plate (the Cycladic blueschist unit) was thrust onto the imbricated mid-crustal units of the Anatolian microcontinent (the Menderes nappes). The contact between the Cycladic blueschist unit and the Menderes nappes, the Cyclades–Menderes thrust, represents an out-of-sequence ramp which cuts up-sect…

BlueschistPaleontologySubductionGreenschistAlpine orogenyGeologyThrust faultAccretion (geology)PaleogeneSeismologyGeologyNappeJournal of the Geological Society
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2001

The roles of volume loss, coaxial versus noncoaxial flow, and blueschist exhumation in subduction-related accretionary wedges are still poorly understood. In our study at Leech Lake Mountain in the Eastern belt of the Franciscan subduction complex, we focus on these subjects. In the specific example of the Franciscan, the tectonic significance of the boundary between the Eastern and Central belts remains controversial. The Leech Lake Mountain area in northern California is situated immediately above this boundary and, therefore, appears to be of crucial importance for understanding aspects of the tectonic evolution of the Franciscan. The structural development at Leech Lake Mountain is char…

BlueschistPaleontologyTectonicsSubductionMetamorphic rockMetamorphismCleavage (geology)GeologyForearcSeismologyGeologyTerraneGeological Society of America Bulletin
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Miocene high-pressure metamorphism in the Cyclades and Crete, Aegean Sea, Greece: Evidence for large-magnitude displacement on the Cretan detachment

2001

The Cyclades in the backarc region of the present Hellenic subduction zone are known for widespread Late Cretaceous to Eocene high-pressure metamorphism in the Cycladic blueschist unit. We report 40 Ar/ 39 Ar and Rb/Sr phengite ages of 24–21 Ma for high- pressure metamorphism (8–10 kbar, 350–400 °C) in the lowest tectonic unit in the Cyclades, the Basal unit, which structurally underlies the Cycladic blueschist unit. The Basal unit is correlated with the Tripolitza unit of the External Hellenides in the forearc region of the Hellenic subduction zone. The Tripolitza unit is unmetamorphosed on Crete, where it is separated from the underlying high-pressure (8–10 kbar, 300–400 °C) Plattenkalk a…

BlueschistPhylliteSubductionCYCLADESGeochemistryMetamorphismGeologyForearcGeologySeismologyCretaceousPhengiteGeology
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Horizontal contraction or horizontal extension? Heterogeneous Late Eocene and early Oligocene general shearing during blueschist and greenschist faci…

1995

Mylonitic structures related to two orogenic events are described from the upper and lower contacts of the Combin zone and the immediately overlying upper Austroalpine Dent Blanche nappe/Mont Mary klippe and the directly underlying lower Austroalpine Etirol-Levaz slice. The first event, Late Eocene in age, commenced during blueschist facies P-T conditions, but pre-dated the peak of subsequent greenschist facies overprint. The second event, Early Oligocene in age, took place during retrograde greenschist facies conditions. Most sense of shear indicators associated with the retrograde mylonites indicate top SE shearing, but subordinate top NW displacing shear sense indicators have also been m…

BlueschistShear (geology)GreenschistAlpine orogenyGeneral Earth and Planetary SciencesMetamorphismEclogitePetrologyGeomorphologyGeologyMyloniteNappeGeologische Rundschau
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Origin of potassic postcollisional volcanic rocks in young, shallow, blueschist-rich lithosphere

2020

Unusually high Th/La in K-rich orogenic rocks may indicate shallow blueschist-rich sources in accretionary settings.

BlueschistgeographyMultidisciplinarygeography.geographical_feature_category010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesContinental collisionLawsoniteSubductionGeochemistrySciAdv r-articlesGeology010502 geochemistry & geophysics01 natural sciencesMantle (geology)Volcanic rockGeochemistryVolcanoLithosphereResearch ArticlesGeologyResearch Article0105 earth and related environmental sciencesScience Advances
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From intra-oceanic subduction to arc accretion and arc-continent collision: Insights from the structural evolution of the Río San Juan metamorphic co…

2013

The Río San Juan metamorphic complex exposes a segment of a high-pressure subduction-accretionary complex built during Caribbean island arc-North America continental margin convergence. It is composed of accreted arc- and oceanic-derived metaigneous rocks, serpentinized peridotites and minor metasediments forming a structural pile. Combined detailed mapping, structural and metamorphic analysis, and geochronology show that the deformation can be divided into five main events (D1eD5). An early subduction-related D1 deformation and M1 metamorphism produced greenschist (mafic rocks of the Gaspar Hernández peridotite-tectonite), blueschist and eclogite (metamafic blocks in the Jagua Clara mélang…

BlueschistgeographyUePb and 40Ar/39Ar geochronologygeography.geographical_feature_categorySubductionGreenschistAccretionary complexU/Pb and 40Ar/39Ar geochronologyRepública DominicanaMetamorphismGeologyHigh-pressure metamorphismLa EspañolaFault (geology)NappePaleontologyShear (geology)Caribbean plateEclogitesubductionSeismologyGeologyRío San Juan
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