The geometry and timing of orogenic extension: An example from the western Italian Alps

Contacts between rocks recording large differences in metamorphic grade are indicative of major tectonic displacements. Low-P upon high-P contacts are commonly interpreted as extensional (i.e. material points on either side of the contact moved apart relative to the palaeo-horizontal), but dating of...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Reddy, Steven, Wheeler, J., Cliff, R.
Format: Journal Article
Published: Blackwells 1999
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.blackwell-synergy.com/doi/abs/10.1046/j.1525-1314.1999.00220.x
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/31300
_version_ 1848753340474720256
author Reddy, Steven
Wheeler, J.
Cliff, R.
author_facet Reddy, Steven
Wheeler, J.
Cliff, R.
author_sort Reddy, Steven
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Contacts between rocks recording large differences in metamorphic grade are indicative of major tectonic displacements. Low-P upon high-P contacts are commonly interpreted as extensional (i.e. material points on either side of the contact moved apart relative to the palaeo-horizontal), but dating of deformation and metamorphism is essential in testing such models. In the Western Alps, the Piemonte Ophiolite consists of eclogites (T 550 600 C and P18 20 kbar) structurally beneath greenschist facies rocks (T 400 C and P9 kbar). Mapping shows that the latter form a kilometre-wide shear zone (the Gressoney Shear Zone, GSZ) dominated by top-SE movement related to crustal extension. Rb Sr data from micas within different GSZ fabrics, which dynamically recrystallized below their blocking temperature, are interpreted as deformation ages. Ages from different samples within the same fabric are reproducible and are consistent with the relative chronology derived from mapping. They show that the GSZ had an extensional deformation history over a period of c. 9 Myr between c. 45 36 Ma. This overlaps in time with the eclogite facies metamorphism. The GSZ operated over the entire period during which the footwall evolved from eclogite to greenschist facies and was therefore responsible for eclogite exhumation. The discrete contact zone between eclogite and greenschist facies rocks is the last active part of the GSZ and truncates greenschist facies folds in the footwall. These final movements were therefore not a major component of eclogite exhumation. Pressure estimates associated with old and young fabrics within the GSZ are comparable, indicating that during extensional deformation there was no significant unroofing of the hangingwall. Since there are no known extensional structures younger than 36 Ma at higher levels in this part of the Alps, exhumation since the final juxtaposition of the two units (at 36 Ma) seems to have been dominated by erosion.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T08:22:58Z
format Journal Article
id curtin-20.500.11937-31300
institution Curtin University Malaysia
institution_category Local University
last_indexed 2025-11-14T08:22:58Z
publishDate 1999
publisher Blackwells
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling curtin-20.500.11937-313002019-05-09T01:48:46Z The geometry and timing of orogenic extension: An example from the western Italian Alps Reddy, Steven Wheeler, J. Cliff, R. tectonic exhumation Rb Sr dating deformation age eclogite Contacts between rocks recording large differences in metamorphic grade are indicative of major tectonic displacements. Low-P upon high-P contacts are commonly interpreted as extensional (i.e. material points on either side of the contact moved apart relative to the palaeo-horizontal), but dating of deformation and metamorphism is essential in testing such models. In the Western Alps, the Piemonte Ophiolite consists of eclogites (T 550 600 C and P18 20 kbar) structurally beneath greenschist facies rocks (T 400 C and P9 kbar). Mapping shows that the latter form a kilometre-wide shear zone (the Gressoney Shear Zone, GSZ) dominated by top-SE movement related to crustal extension. Rb Sr data from micas within different GSZ fabrics, which dynamically recrystallized below their blocking temperature, are interpreted as deformation ages. Ages from different samples within the same fabric are reproducible and are consistent with the relative chronology derived from mapping. They show that the GSZ had an extensional deformation history over a period of c. 9 Myr between c. 45 36 Ma. This overlaps in time with the eclogite facies metamorphism. The GSZ operated over the entire period during which the footwall evolved from eclogite to greenschist facies and was therefore responsible for eclogite exhumation. The discrete contact zone between eclogite and greenschist facies rocks is the last active part of the GSZ and truncates greenschist facies folds in the footwall. These final movements were therefore not a major component of eclogite exhumation. Pressure estimates associated with old and young fabrics within the GSZ are comparable, indicating that during extensional deformation there was no significant unroofing of the hangingwall. Since there are no known extensional structures younger than 36 Ma at higher levels in this part of the Alps, exhumation since the final juxtaposition of the two units (at 36 Ma) seems to have been dominated by erosion. 1999 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/31300 10.1046/j.1525-1314.1999.00220.x http://www.blackwell-synergy.com/doi/abs/10.1046/j.1525-1314.1999.00220.x Blackwells restricted
spellingShingle tectonic
exhumation
Rb Sr dating
deformation age
eclogite
Reddy, Steven
Wheeler, J.
Cliff, R.
The geometry and timing of orogenic extension: An example from the western Italian Alps
title The geometry and timing of orogenic extension: An example from the western Italian Alps
title_full The geometry and timing of orogenic extension: An example from the western Italian Alps
title_fullStr The geometry and timing of orogenic extension: An example from the western Italian Alps
title_full_unstemmed The geometry and timing of orogenic extension: An example from the western Italian Alps
title_short The geometry and timing of orogenic extension: An example from the western Italian Alps
title_sort geometry and timing of orogenic extension: an example from the western italian alps
topic tectonic
exhumation
Rb Sr dating
deformation age
eclogite
url http://www.blackwell-synergy.com/doi/abs/10.1046/j.1525-1314.1999.00220.x
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/31300