TY - JOUR
T1 - Compressional origin of the Naxos metamorphic core complex, greece
T2 - Structure, petrography, and thermobarometry
AU - Lamont, Thomas N.
AU - Searle, Michael P.
AU - Waters, David J.
AU - Roberts, Nick M.W.
AU - Palin, Richard M.
AU - Smye, Andrew
AU - Dyck, Brendan
AU - Gopon, Phillip
AU - Weller, Owen M.
AU - St-Onge, Marc R.
N1 - Funding Information:
This work forms part of T.N. Lamont's doctoral project, which was funded by the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC; grant NE/L0021612/1). Analytical work at the NERC Isotope Geosciences Laboratory was funded by NERC Isotope Geosciences Facilities Steering Committee grant IP-1597-1115. We thank Philip England, Anthony Watts, Dave Wallis, Lars Hansen, and Tyler Ambrose for thoughtprovoking and critical discussion. We extend thanks to Callum Higgins, William Nash, and Anna Bidgood for assistance in the field, Adrian Wood for assistance with mineral separation, Owen Green and Jonathan Wells for thin section preparation, and Gren Turner, Jeremy Rushton, and Jon Wade for analytical assistance. Chris Ballhaus and Christoph Von Hagkne are thanked for thorough reviews, which greatly improved the quality of the manuscript, and Nick Timms, Chris Kirkland, and Aaron Cavosie are thanked for handling the manuscript and providing further comments. We finally thank University College, Oxford for travel bursaries covering fieldwork expenses and the University of Oxford and NERC for generously covering publication and open access costs.
Funding Information:
This work forms part of T.N. Lamont’s doctoral project, which was funded by the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC; grant NE/L0021612/1). Analytical work at the NERC Isotope Geosciences Laboratory was funded by NERC Isotope Geosciences Facilities Steering Committee grant IP-1597-1115. We thank Philip England, Anthony Watts, Dave Wallis, Lars Hansen, and Tyler Ambrose for thought-provoking and critical discussion. We extend thanks to Callum Higgins, William Nash, and Anna Bidgood for assistance in the field, Adrian Wood for assistance with mineral separation, Owen Green and Jonathan Wells for thin section preparation, and Gren Turner, Jeremy Rushton, and Jon Wade for analytical assistance. Chris Ballhaus and Christoph Von Hagkne are thanked for thorough reviews, which greatly improved the quality of the manuscript, and Nick Timms, Chris Kirkland, and Aaron Cavosie are thanked for handling the manuscript and providing further comments. We finally thank University College, Oxford for travel bursaries covering fieldwork expenses and the University of Oxford and NERC for generously covering publication and open access costs.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2019 The Authors. Gold Open Access: This paper is published under the terms of the CC-BY license.
PY - 2020/1/1
Y1 - 2020/1/1
N2 - The island of Naxos, Greece, has been previously considered to represent a Cordilleran-style metamorphic core complex that formed during Cenozoic extension of the Aegean Sea. Although lithospheric extension has undoubtedly occurred in the region since 10 Ma, the geodynamic history of older, regional-scale, kyanite-and sillimanitegrade metamorphic rocks exposed within the core of the Naxos dome is controversial. Specifically, little is known about the preextensional prograde evolution and the relative timing of peak metamorphism in relation to the onset of extension. In this work, new structural mapping is presented and integrated with petrographic analyses and phase equilibrium modeling of blueschists, kyanite gneisses, and anatectic sillimanite migmatites. The kyanite-sillimanite-grade rocks within the core complex record a complex history of burial and compression and did not form under crustal extension. Deformation and metamorphism were diachronous and advanced down the structural section, resulting in the juxtaposition of several distinct tectono-stratigraphic nappes that experienced contrasting metamorphic histories. The Cycladic Blueschists attained ~14.5 kbar and 470 °C during attempted northeast-directed subduction of the continental margin. These were subsequently thrusted onto the more proximal continental margin, resulting in crustal thickening and regional metamorphism associated with kyanite-grade conditions of ~10 kbar and 600-670 °C. With continued shortening, the deepest structural levels underwent kyanite-grade hydrous melting at ~8-10 kbar and 680-750 °C, followed by isothermal decompression through the muscovite dehydration melting reaction to sillimanite-grade conditions of ~5-6 kbar and 730 °C. This decompression process was associated with top-to-the-NNE shearing along passive-roof faults that formed because of SW-directed extrusion. These shear zones predated crustal extension, because they are folded around the migmatite dome and are crosscut by leucogranites and low-angle normal faults. The migmatite dome formed at lower-pressure conditions under horizontal constriction that caused vertical boudinage and upright isoclinal folds. The switch from compression to extension occurred immediately following doming and was associated with NNE-SSW horizontal boudinage and top-to-the-NNE brittle-ductile normal faults that truncate the internal shear zones and earlier collisional features. The Naxos metamorphic core complex is interpreted to have formed via crustal thickening, regional metamorphism, and partial melting in a compressional setting, here termed the Aegean orogeny, and it was exhumed from the midcrust due to the switch from compression to extension at ca. 15 Ma.
AB - The island of Naxos, Greece, has been previously considered to represent a Cordilleran-style metamorphic core complex that formed during Cenozoic extension of the Aegean Sea. Although lithospheric extension has undoubtedly occurred in the region since 10 Ma, the geodynamic history of older, regional-scale, kyanite-and sillimanitegrade metamorphic rocks exposed within the core of the Naxos dome is controversial. Specifically, little is known about the preextensional prograde evolution and the relative timing of peak metamorphism in relation to the onset of extension. In this work, new structural mapping is presented and integrated with petrographic analyses and phase equilibrium modeling of blueschists, kyanite gneisses, and anatectic sillimanite migmatites. The kyanite-sillimanite-grade rocks within the core complex record a complex history of burial and compression and did not form under crustal extension. Deformation and metamorphism were diachronous and advanced down the structural section, resulting in the juxtaposition of several distinct tectono-stratigraphic nappes that experienced contrasting metamorphic histories. The Cycladic Blueschists attained ~14.5 kbar and 470 °C during attempted northeast-directed subduction of the continental margin. These were subsequently thrusted onto the more proximal continental margin, resulting in crustal thickening and regional metamorphism associated with kyanite-grade conditions of ~10 kbar and 600-670 °C. With continued shortening, the deepest structural levels underwent kyanite-grade hydrous melting at ~8-10 kbar and 680-750 °C, followed by isothermal decompression through the muscovite dehydration melting reaction to sillimanite-grade conditions of ~5-6 kbar and 730 °C. This decompression process was associated with top-to-the-NNE shearing along passive-roof faults that formed because of SW-directed extrusion. These shear zones predated crustal extension, because they are folded around the migmatite dome and are crosscut by leucogranites and low-angle normal faults. The migmatite dome formed at lower-pressure conditions under horizontal constriction that caused vertical boudinage and upright isoclinal folds. The switch from compression to extension occurred immediately following doming and was associated with NNE-SSW horizontal boudinage and top-to-the-NNE brittle-ductile normal faults that truncate the internal shear zones and earlier collisional features. The Naxos metamorphic core complex is interpreted to have formed via crustal thickening, regional metamorphism, and partial melting in a compressional setting, here termed the Aegean orogeny, and it was exhumed from the midcrust due to the switch from compression to extension at ca. 15 Ma.
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U2 - 10.1130/B31978.1
DO - 10.1130/B31978.1
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85063768636
SN - 0016-7606
VL - 132
SP - 149
EP - 197
JO - Bulletin of the Geological Society of America
JF - Bulletin of the Geological Society of America
IS - 1-2
ER -