TY - JOUR A1 - Rötzler, Jochen A1 - Romer, R. L. A1 - Budzinski, Hubertus A1 - Oberhänsli, Roland T1 - Ultrahigh-temperature high-pressure granulites from Tirschheim, Saxon Granulite Massif, Germany : P-T-t path and geotectonic implications N2 - The Saxon granulites, the type granulite locality, were deeply buried, extremely heated and then rapidly exhumed during the Variscan Orogeny; thus their evolution differs from many granulites elsewhere. The peak-metamorphic assemblages of layered felsic-mafic granulites from a 500 m deep borehole consist of garnet, kyanite, rutile, ternary feldspar and quartz in felsic granulite, and garnet, omphacite, titanite, ternary feldspar and quartz in mafic granulite. A minimum temperature of 1000-1020degreesC, calculated from reintegrated hypersolvus feldspar in felsic and mafic granulites, is consistent with the highest temperature estimates from garnet-clinopyroxene equilibria. Various equilibria in felsic and mafic granulites record a peak pressure of about 23 kbar. Diffusion zoning and local homogenisation of minerals reflect near-isothermal decompression that preceded cooling and partial hydration at medium- to low-pressure. U-Pb dating of titanite yields an age of peak metamorphism at 340.7+/-0.8 Ma (2sigma). However, chemical inheritance from precursor rutile and post-peak Pb loss are also evident, suggesting a protolith age of 499+/-2 Ma (2sigma) and partial resetting down to an age of 333+/-2 Ma (2sigma). Rb-Sr mica ages of 333.2+/-3.3 Ma (2sigma) are interpreted as dating cooling through about 620degreesC. Hence the Saxon granulites were exhumed to the upper crust during the short period of 6-11 Ma, which corresponds to average exhumation and cooling rates of 10 mm/year and 50degreesC/Ma, respectively. Such rapid exhumation is inconsistent with recent numerical models that assume foreland- directed transport of the Saxon granulites in the lower crust followed by extensional unroofing. Instead, high-pressure rocks of the Saxon Granulite Massif and the nearby Erzgebirge experienced a buoyant rise to the middle crust and subsequent juxtaposition with structurally higher units along a series of medium- to low-pressure detachment faults Y1 - 2004 SN - 0935-1221 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Wawrzenitz, Nicole A1 - Krohe, Alexander A1 - Baziotis, Ioannis A1 - Mposkos, Evripidis A1 - Kylander-Clark, Andrew R. C. A1 - Romer, Rolf L. T1 - LASS U-Th-Pb monazite and rutile geochronology of felsic high-pressure granulites (Rhodope, N Greece): Effects of fluid, deformation and metamorphic reactions in local subsystems JF - Lithos : an international journal of mineralogy, petrology, and geochemistry N2 - The specific chemical composition of monazite in shear zones is controlled by the syndeformation dissolution-precipitation reactions of the rock-forming minerals. This relation can be used for dating deformation, even when microfabric characteristics like shape preferred orientation or intracrystalline deformation of monazite itself are missing. Monazite contemporaneously formed in and around the shear zones may have different compositions. These depend on the local chemical context rather than reflecting successive crystallization episodes of monazite. This is demonstrated in polymetamorphic, mylonitic high-pressure (HP) garnet-kyanite granulites of the Alpine Sidironero Complex (Rhodope UHP terrain, Northern Greece). The studied mylonitic rocks escaped from regional migmatization at 40-36 Ma and from subsequent shearing through cooling until 36 Ma. In-situ laser-ablation split-stream inductively-coupled plasma mass spectrometry (LASS) analyses have been carried out on monazite from micro-scale shear zones, from pre-mylonitic microlithons as well as of monazite inclusions in relictic minerals complimented by U-Pb data on rutile and Rb-Sr data of biotite. Two major metamorphic episodes, Mesozoic and Cenozoic, are constrained. Chemical compositions, isotopic characteristics and apparent ages systematically vary among monazite of four different microfabric domains (I-IV). Within three pre-mylonitic domains (inclusions in (I) pre-mylonitic kyanite and (II) garnet porphyroclasts, and (III) in pre-mylonitic microlithons) monazite yields ages of ca. 130-150 Ma for HP-granulite metamorphism, in line with previous geochronological results in the area. Patchy alteration of the pre-mylonitic monazite by intra-grain dissolution-precipitation processes variably increased negative Eu anomaly and reduced the HREE contents. The apparent age of this altered monazite is reduced. Monazite in the syn-mylonitic shear bands (IV) differs in chemical composition from unaltered and altered monazite of the three pre-mylonitic domains by having a significantly more pronounced negative Eu anomaly, a flatter HREE pattern, and high Th content. These compositional characteristics are linked with syn-mylonitic formation of plagioclase and resorption of garnet in the shear bands under amphibolite fades conditions. The absence of pre-mylonitic monazite in the shear zones, in contrast to the other domains, suggests complete dissolution of old and formation of new monazite. This probably results from an increased alkalinity and reactivity of the fluid that again is controlled by syn-mylonitic interaction with feldspar and apatite in the shear zones. There, the deformation was accommodated by dissolution precipitation creep at ca. 690 +/- 50 degrees C and 6-7.5 kbar. Growth of monazite at 55 +/- 1 Ma dates this deformation, which precedes the regional migmatization of the Sidironero Complex, whereas rutile and biotite ages reflect these later stages. This new pressure-temperature-time constraint for a relictic deformation structure provides insight into the still missing parts of the overall metamorphic, deformation and exhumation processes of the UHP units in the Rhodope. (C) 2015 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved. KW - In-situ Laser Ablation Split Stream ICPMS KW - UHP exhumation KW - Dissolution precipitation replacement KW - Creep KW - HP-granulite KW - Fluid-rock interaction Y1 - 2015 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.lithos.2015.06.029 SN - 0024-4937 SN - 1872-6143 VL - 232 SP - 266 EP - 285 PB - Elsevier CY - Amsterdam ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Willner, Arne P. A1 - van Staal, Cees R. A1 - Zagorevski, A. A1 - Glodny, Johannes A1 - Romer, Rolf L. A1 - Sudo, Masafumi T1 - Tectonometamorphic evolution along the Iapetus suture zone in Newfoundland BT - Evidence for polyphase Salinic, Acadian and Neoacadian very low- to medium-grade metamorphism and deformation JF - Tectonophysics : international journal of geotectonics and the geology and physics of the interior of the earth N2 - The Red Indian Line (RIL) in central Newfoundland is the suture, where the main tract of the Iapetus Ocean was closed at similar to 452 Ma during accretion of the peri-Gondwanan Victoria arc with the composite active Laurentian margin. The protracted deformation history of this soft collision started at similar to 471 Ma with accretion of oceanic terranes to the active composite Laurentian margin. After Iapetus closure both colliding active margins were progressively deformed and metamorphosed during Silurian and Devonian (Salinic, Acadian and Neoacadian orogenic cycles). Peak conditions of the very low- to medium-grade, heterogeneously distributed metamorphism were determined by pseudosection techniques within the range of 2-7 kbar, 230-450 degrees C during increase of the metamorphic field gradient from similar to 12 degrees C/km to similar to 32 degrees C/km over time. Multiple metamorphic crystallisation stages were dated by white mica Ar-40/Ar-39 spot and plateau ages, additional Rb-Sr mineral isochrons involving white mica and one U/Pb age of titanite. All resulting ages between 439 +/- 4 Ma and 356 +/- 16 Ma postdate the closure of Iapetus. Results differ along two transects: The oldest ages of 443-421 Ma (Salinic orogenic cycle) were observed along the northern transect through the RIL zone with minimal younger overprint. Hence low temperature, intermediate to high pressure conditions (4.0-7.0 kbar, 230-340 degrees C) achieved during Taconic-Salinic underthrusting are well preserved. During Acadian dextral transpression the Taconic-Salinic structural wedge was tilted subvertically. In contrast, rocks along the southern transect through the RIL zone mainly show Acadian ages of 408-390 Ma with local preservation of older ages. Acadian deformation occurred under low temperature/low pressure conditions (similar to 250-450 degrees C, 2.5-4.6 kbar). Also Silurian terrestrial cover rocks were buried under these conditions. Acadian-Neoacadian deformation (393-340 Ma) becomes younger towards the northwest and progressively localized in transcurrent fault zones. This final foreland deformation at shallow crustal level established the Acadian/Neoacadian orogenic front in central Newfoundland slightly northwest of the RIL. KW - IAPETUS suture KW - PT pseudosection KW - White mica Ar-40/ Ar-39 spot ages KW - Rb-Sr mineral isochron KW - U/Pb dating of titanite KW - Salinic KW - Acadian KW - Neoacadian orogenic cycles Y1 - 2018 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tecto.2018.05.023 SN - 0040-1951 SN - 1879-3266 VL - 742 SP - 137 EP - 167 PB - Elsevier CY - Amsterdam ER -