Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Deep subduction and exhumation of continental crust in the Alps
View through CrossRef
<p>The Adula Nappe in the Central Alps and the Pohorje Nappe in the Eastern Alps are among the highest-pressure metamorphic complexes in the Alps. In both cases, Variscan continental crust containing post-Variscan intrusions was subducted, during the Cenomanian-Turonian in the case of Pohorje and during the Eocene in the case of Adula.</p><p>The Pohorje Nappe is exceptional in that ultrahigh pressures of 3.0 to 4.0 GPa are recorded by different rocks contrasting in rheology: competent lenses of kyanite eclogite and garnet peridotite as well as the surrounding incompetent matrix of diamond-bearing paragneiss. If pressure had been strongly non-lithostatic, rheologically different rock types would be expected to record different pressures. This is not the case, which rather suggests near-lithostatic pressure and, consequently, subduction to >100 km depth. Lu-Hf ages for UHP metamorphism in eclogite and garnet peridotite are similar (c. 96&#8211;92 Ma). Paragneiss yielded Permian to Triassic zircon cores and Cretaceous (c. 92 Ma) rims grown during UHP metamorphism. Hence, the rocks were subducted and exhumed together as a coherent, although strongly deformed unit.</p><p>The Adula Nappe originated from the southern passive continental margin of Europe. It was buried in and exhumed from a south-dipping subduction zone after Europe-Adria continent collision. Previous interpretations as a tectonic m&#233;lange were based on the mixture of gneiss with eclogite and garnet peridotite lenses. However, the eclogites also record an older (Variscan) metamorphism and thus do not represent Mesozoic oceanic crust but pre-Alpine continental basement, just like the gneisses. The Alpine subduction culminated around 37 Ma. Alpine metamorphic pressures show a strong gradient from c. 1.2 GPa at the front of the nappe in the North to >3 GPa in garnet peridotite and eclogite in the southernmost part (e.g. Alpe Arami), over a north-south distance of only c. 40 km. In contrast to Pohorje, indications of UHP metamorphism have not yet been found in the gneissic matrix surrounding eclogite and peridotite. During exhumation, the nappe was intensely sheared and folded but stayed coherent and did not mix with the surrounding units. &#160;The exhumation of the Adula from deep in the subduction zone is recorded by mylonitic shearing in the gneissic matrix. Structures, strain, and textures indicate strongly three-dimensional, non-plane-strain flow. Differential loading, not buoyancy, is proposed to have caused the exhumation.</p><p>The main results from these two case studies are: (1) Subduction of continental crust to mantle depth is real and not a misinterpretation of non-lithostatic pressure; (2) not all subducted units are m&#233;langes but some stay coherent during subduction and exhumation.</p>
Title: Deep subduction and exhumation of continental crust in the Alps
Description:
<p>The Adula Nappe in the Central Alps and the Pohorje Nappe in the Eastern Alps are among the highest-pressure metamorphic complexes in the Alps.
In both cases, Variscan continental crust containing post-Variscan intrusions was subducted, during the Cenomanian-Turonian in the case of Pohorje and during the Eocene in the case of Adula.
</p><p>The Pohorje Nappe is exceptional in that ultrahigh pressures of 3.
0 to 4.
0 GPa are recorded by different rocks contrasting in rheology: competent lenses of kyanite eclogite and garnet peridotite as well as the surrounding incompetent matrix of diamond-bearing paragneiss.
If pressure had been strongly non-lithostatic, rheologically different rock types would be expected to record different pressures.
This is not the case, which rather suggests near-lithostatic pressure and, consequently, subduction to >100 km depth.
Lu-Hf ages for UHP metamorphism in eclogite and garnet peridotite are similar (c.
96&#8211;92 Ma).
Paragneiss yielded Permian to Triassic zircon cores and Cretaceous (c.
92 Ma) rims grown during UHP metamorphism.
Hence, the rocks were subducted and exhumed together as a coherent, although strongly deformed unit.
</p><p>The Adula Nappe originated from the southern passive continental margin of Europe.
It was buried in and exhumed from a south-dipping subduction zone after Europe-Adria continent collision.
Previous interpretations as a tectonic m&#233;lange were based on the mixture of gneiss with eclogite and garnet peridotite lenses.
However, the eclogites also record an older (Variscan) metamorphism and thus do not represent Mesozoic oceanic crust but pre-Alpine continental basement, just like the gneisses.
The Alpine subduction culminated around 37 Ma.
Alpine metamorphic pressures show a strong gradient from c.
1.
2 GPa at the front of the nappe in the North to >3 GPa in garnet peridotite and eclogite in the southernmost part (e.
g.
Alpe Arami), over a north-south distance of only c.
40 km.
In contrast to Pohorje, indications of UHP metamorphism have not yet been found in the gneissic matrix surrounding eclogite and peridotite.
During exhumation, the nappe was intensely sheared and folded but stayed coherent and did not mix with the surrounding units.
&#160;The exhumation of the Adula from deep in the subduction zone is recorded by mylonitic shearing in the gneissic matrix.
Structures, strain, and textures indicate strongly three-dimensional, non-plane-strain flow.
Differential loading, not buoyancy, is proposed to have caused the exhumation.
</p><p>The main results from these two case studies are: (1) Subduction of continental crust to mantle depth is real and not a misinterpretation of non-lithostatic pressure; (2) not all subducted units are m&#233;langes but some stay coherent during subduction and exhumation.
</p>.
Related Results
Geodynamic modelling of continental subduction beneath oceanic lithosphere
Geodynamic modelling of continental subduction beneath oceanic lithosphere
Subduction of an oceanic plate beneath either an oceanic, or a continental, overriding plate requires two main conditions to occur in a steady state: i) a high enough subduction ra...
From orogenic range to orogenic plateau, what evolution along the Tethys subduction zone from the Alps to Tibet?
From orogenic range to orogenic plateau, what evolution along the Tethys subduction zone from the Alps to Tibet?
For long, the continental lithosphere considered less dense than the mantle, was not supposed to be able to subduct. Nevertheless, continental subduction has been proposed for deca...
Dynamics of multiple microcontinent accretion during oceanic subduction
Dynamics of multiple microcontinent accretion during oceanic subduction
Microcontinent accretion during oceanic subduction is one of the main contributors to continental crustal growth. Many of the continental mountain belts we find today were built fr...
Subductability of continental lithosphere
Subductability of continental lithosphere
Abstract
Multiple lines of evidence from geological and geophysical observations indicate the deep subduction of continental lithosphere; however, the potential and ...
2D Numerical modelling of continental subduction and synthetic obduction
2D Numerical modelling of continental subduction and synthetic obduction
Continental subduction beneath an overriding oceanic plate is known to occur in nature, following the arrival of a continental margin at an intra-oceanic subduction zone, and often...
Quantification of Tertiary exhumation from sonic velocity data, Celtic Sea/South-Western Approaches
Quantification of Tertiary exhumation from sonic velocity data, Celtic Sea/South-Western Approaches
Abstract
Sonic velocities from the Danian Chalk, the Upper Cretaceous Chalk, the Lower Cretaceous Greensand/Gault Clay, and the Triassic Mercia Mudstone were used to quan...
Relationships between subduction tectonics beneath the Alps and the source-to-sink sedimentary pathways in the Molasse basin
Relationships between subduction tectonics beneath the Alps and the source-to-sink sedimentary pathways in the Molasse basin
The stratigraphic development of foreland basins has mainly been related to surface loading in the adjacent orogens, whereas the controls of slab loads on these basins have receive...
Sismotectonique du prisme de la Barbade : implications sur le potentiel sismogénique de la zone de subduction des Antilles
Sismotectonique du prisme de la Barbade : implications sur le potentiel sismogénique de la zone de subduction des Antilles
La zone de subduction des Petites Antilles résulte de la subduction des plaques nord- et sud-américaines sous la plaque Caraïbe dans une direction SW à ~ 2 cm/an. Cette zone pourra...

