Hot metamorphic core complex in a cold foreland

The Montagne Noire forms the southernmost part of the French Massif Central. Carboniferous flysch sediments and very low-grade metamorphic imprint testify to a very external position in the orogen. Sedimentation of synorogenic clastic sediments continued up to the Viséan/Namurian boundary (≤320 Ma)....

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Veröffentlicht in:International journal of earth sciences : Geologische Rundschau 2011-06, Vol.100 (4), p.753-785
Hauptverfasser: Franke, Wolfgang, Doublier, Michael Patrick, Klama, Kai, Potel, Sébastien, Wemmer, Klaus
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The Montagne Noire forms the southernmost part of the French Massif Central. Carboniferous flysch sediments and very low-grade metamorphic imprint testify to a very external position in the orogen. Sedimentation of synorogenic clastic sediments continued up to the Viséan/Namurian boundary (≤320 Ma). Subsequently, the Palaeozoic sedimentary pile underwent recumbent folding and grossly southward thrusting. An extensional window exposes a hot core of Carboniferous HT/LP gneisses, migmatites and granites (Zone Axiale), which was uplifted from under the nappe pile. After the emplacement of the nappes on the Zone Axiale (Variscan D 1 ), all structural levels shared the same tectonic evolution: D 2 (extension and exhumation), D 3 (refolding) and post-D 3 dextral transtension. HT/LP-metamorphism in the crystalline rocks probably started before and continued after the emplacement of the nappes. Peak metamorphic temperatures were attained during a post-nappe thermal increment (M 2 ). M 2 occurred during ENE-directed bilateral extension, which exhumed the Zone Axiale and its frame as a ductile horst structure, flanked to the ENE by a Stephanian intra-montane basin. Map patterns and mesoscopic structures reveal that extension in ENE occurred simultaneously with NNW-oriented shortening. Combination of these D 2 effects defines a bulk prolate strain in a “pinched pull-apart” setting. Ductile D 2 deformation during M 2 dominates the structural record. In wide parts of the nappes on the southern flank of the Zone Axiale, D 1 is only represented by the inverted position of bedding (overturned limbs of recumbent D 1 folds) and by refolded D 1 folds. U–Pb monazite and zircon ages and K–Ar muscovite ages are in accord with Ar–Ar data from the literature. HT/LP metamorphism and granitoid intrusion commenced already at ≥330 Ma and continued until 297 Ma, and probably in a separate pulse in post-Stephanian time. Metamorphic ages older than c. 300 Ma are not compatible with the classical model of thermal relaxation after stacking, since they either pre-date or too closely post-date the end of flysch sedimentation. We therefore propose that migmatization and granite melt generation were independent from crustal thickening and caused, instead, by the repeated intrusion of melts into a crustal-scale strike-slip shear zone. Advective heating continued in a pull-apart setting whose activity outlasted the emplacement of the Variscan nappe pile. The shear-zone model is confirmed by simi
ISSN:1437-3254
1437-3262
DOI:10.1007/s00531-010-0512-7