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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item:
http://hdl.handle.net/10174/32768
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Title: | Variscan intracrustal recycling by melting of Carboniferous arc-like igneous protoliths (Évora Massif, Iberian Variscan belt) |
Authors: | Rodriguez, C. Pereira, M.F. Castro, A. Gutierrez-Alonso, G. Fernandez, C. |
Keywords: | Carboniferous arc magmatism Geochemistry U-Pb zircon dating Intracrustal recycling |
Issue Date: | 2021 |
Publisher: | The Geological Society of America |
Citation: | Rodríguez, C., Pereira, M.F., Castro, A., Gutiérrez-Alonso, G., Fernández, C., (2021), Variscan intracrustal recycling by melting of Carboniferous arc-like igneous protoliths (Évora Massif, Iberian Variscan belt): BULLETIN OF THE GEOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF AMERICA 134, 5-6. 1549-1570 |
Abstract: | Bulk rock geochemistry and sensitive
high-resolution ion microprobe zircon geochronology of igneous and metaigneous
rocks of the Évora gneiss dome, located to
the north of the reworked Rheic Ocean suture zone in the southwest Iberian Variscan
belt, reveal a succession of magmatic and
melting events lasting ∼30 m.y. between ca.
341–314 Ma. The study of detailed feld relationships of orthomigmatites (i.e., migmatites
from igneous protoliths) and host granitic
rocks proved to be crucial to reconstruct
the complex sequence of tectono-thermal
events of the Évora gneiss dome. The older
igneous protoliths, with marked geochemical arc-like signatures, are represented by
338 ± 3 Ma tonalites and 336 ± 3 Ma diorites.
These tonalites and diorites appear as mesosomes of igneous orthomigmatites containing new melts (leucosomes) of monzogranite
composition and silica-poor trondhjemites
formed in a melting episode at 329 ± 4/6 to
327 ± 3 Ma. The absence of peritectic phases
(e.g., pyroxene), together with shearing associated with migmatization, imply the existence of water-rich fluids during melting of
the older igneous rocks of the Évora gneiss
dome. This melting event is coeval with the
second magmatic event of the Évora gneiss
dome represented by the neighboring Pavia
pluton. A porphyritic monzogranite dated at
314 ± 4 Ma defnes a later magmatic event.
The porphyritic monzogranite encloses large
blocks of the orthomigmatites and contains
magmatic mafc enclaves (autoliths) dated
at 337 ± 4 Ma that are ∼23 m.y. older than
the host rock. All studied rocks of the Évora
gneiss dome show arc-like, calc-alkaline geochemical signatures. Our results support recycling of intermediate-mafc plutonic rocks,
representing the root of an early magmatic
arc that formed at the time of GondwanaLaurussia convergence (after the closure of
the Rheic Ocean) and coeval subduction of
the Paleotethys. A geodynamic model involving ridge subduction is proposed to explain
the Early Carboniferous intra-orogenic
crustal extension, dome formation, exhumation of high-grade rocks, compositional variations of magmatism and formation of new
granitic magmatism in which, arc-like signatures were inherited from the crustal source. |
URI: | http://hdl.handle.net/10174/32768 |
Type: | article |
Appears in Collections: | ICT - Publicações - Artigos em Revistas Internacionais Com Arbitragem Científica
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