International Geologiical Congress - Oslo 2008

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EUR-06 Collisional orogeny in the Caledonian-Appalachian Orogen

 

The anatomy of a major late-stage thrust in the Caledonian crust of northern Scandinavia

 

Mark Anderson, University of Plymouth (United Kingdom)
Willis Hames, Auburn University (United States)
Alison Stokes, University of Plymouth (United Kingdom)
 

 

Within the stack of Caledonian crystalline thrust sheets of northern Scandinavia, a single amphibolite facies lithotectonic unit, the Smtinden nappe, is identified as a major, basement-coupled ("stretching") shear zone. This dominantly pelitic unit achieved peak metamorphic conditions of 535-550°C and 8-9kbars, and the stretching geometry suggests that this most likely occurred in response to overthrusting of a hot, pre-assembled Caledonian thrust stack. Along-strike variations in microstructural geometries and patterns of mineral zoning in widely developed porphyroblast phases suggest, however, subsequent strain partitioning within the zone during late-stage decoupling of the thrust stack from the basement along major out-of-sequence thrusts.
Large parts of the nappe are characterised by relatively late, static growth preserving concordant Si-Se relationships, and typically symmetrical external fabrics consistent with formation under dominantly pure shear conditions. In the Salangen area, however, the nappe is characterised by early garnet growth, with discordant Si-Se relationships and asymmetric external fabric geometries consistent with formation during ESE-directed simple shear. Remarkably consistent thermometric estimates from chlorites in both regimes (post- and syn-shearing) suggest that out-of-sequence ramping occurred at temperatures in the range 370-400°C, within the typical range of blocking temperatures for argon retention in muscovite. 40Ar-39Ar dating of muscovites from S-C fabrics in the out-of-sequence shear zone suggest that late-stage thrusting occurred during the middle-late Devonian (ca. 395-375 Ma).

 

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