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Prograde and retrograde metamorphic fabrics – a key for understanding burial and exhumation in orogens (Bohemian Massif)
Authors:E SKRZYPEK  P ?TÍPSKÁ  K SCHULMANN  O LEXA  M LEXOVÁ
Institution:1. Ecole et Observatoire des Sciences de la Terre – UMR 7516, Université de Strasbourg, 1, rue Blessig, 67084 Strasbourg, France (etienne.skrzypek@eost.u‐strasbg.fr);2. Institute of Petrology and Structural Geology, Charles University, Albertov 6, 12843 Prague, Czech Republic;3. Czech Geological Survey, Klárov 3, 11000 Prague, Czech Republic;4. Mykuna, Nad Hercovkou 15, 18000 Prague 8, Czech Republic
Abstract:In the Orlica–?nie?nik Dome (NE Bohemian massif), alternating belts of orthogneiss with high‐pressure rocks and belts of mid‐crustal metasedimentary–metavolcanic rocks commonly display a dominant subvertical fabric deformed into a subhorizontal foliation. The first macroscopic foliation is subvertical, strikes NE–SW and is heterogeneously folded by open to isoclinal folds with subhorizontal axial planes parallel to the heterogeneously developed flat‐lying foliation. The metamorphic evolution of the mid‐crustal metasedimentary rocks involved successive crystallization of chlorite–muscovite–ilmenite–plagioclase–garnet, followed by staurolite‐bearing and then kyanite‐bearing assemblages in the subvertical fabric. This was followed by garnet retrogression, with syntectonic crystallization of sillimanite and andalusite parallel to the shallow‐dipping foliation. Elsewhere, andalusite and cordierite statically overgrew the flat‐lying fabric. With reference to a P–T pseudosection for a representative sample, the prograde succession of mineral assemblages and the garnet zoning pattern with decreasing grossular, spessartine and XFe are compatible with a PT path from 3.5–5 kbar/490–520 °C to peak conditions of 6–7 kbar/~630 °C suggesting burial from 12 to 25 km with increasing temperature. Using the same pseudosection, the retrograde succession of minerals shows decompression to sillimanite stability at ~4 kbar/~630 °C and to andalusite–cordierite stability at 2–3 kbar indicating exhumation from 25 km to around 9–12 km. Subsequent exhumation to ~6 km occurred without apparent formation of a deformation fabric. The structure and petrology together with the spatial distribution of the metasedimentary–metavolcanic rocks, and gneissic and high‐pressure belts are compatible with a model of burial of limited parts of the upper and middle crust in narrow cusp‐like synclines, synchronous with the exhumation of orogenic lower crust represented by the gneissic and high‐pressure rocks in lobe‐shaped and volumetrically more important anticlines. Converging PTD paths for the metasedimentary rocks and the adjacent high‐pressure rocks are due to vertical exchanges between cold and hot vertically moving masses. Finally, the retrograde shallow‐dipping fabric affects both the metasedimentary–metavolcanic rocks and the gneissic and high‐pressure rocks, and indicates that the ~15‐km exhumation was mostly accommodated by heterogeneous ductile thinning associated with unroofing of a buoyant crustal root.
Keywords:Bohemian Massif  burial and exhumation  prograde and retrograde fabrics  P–  T–  D path  P–  T pseudosection
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