4.6 Article

An eclogite-bearing continental tectonic slice in the Zermatt-Saas high-pressure ophiolites at Trockener Steg (Zermatt, Swiss Western Alps)

Journal

LITHOS
Volume 232, Issue -, Pages 336-359

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.lithos.2015.07.010

Keywords

Eclogite; Trockener Steg Unit; Swiss Alps; Zermatt-Saas Zone; Subduction; Thermodynamic modeling

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The Theodul Glacier Unit (TGU) at Trockener Steg represents a continental slice, embedded within the ophiolitic Zermatt-Saas Zone. The Zermatt-Saas Zone is the remnant of the Piemonte-Liguria oceanic lithosphere, formed in the middle Jurassic and subducted up to eclogite fades conditions in the Early Tertiary. The close spatial association of the TGU to the Zermatt-Saas Zone permits a comparison of the metamorphic evolution of the units by detailed field mapping and a petrological investigation of eclogites. The edogites from both tectono-metamorphic units can be clearly distinguished by their textures, mineral assemblages and by mineral and bulk-rock composition. Geothermobarometry and computed assemblage stability diagrams for the TGU eclogites indicate P-T conditions of 22 +/- 0.1 GPa and 580 +/- 50 degrees C. These derived P-T conditions must be considered as minimum peak metamorphic conditions the rocks achieved during subduction. The P-T data are different from those derived for eclogites of Zermatt-Saas Zone adjacent to the Theodul Glacier Unit, that reached maximal burial depths at 23-2.4 GPa and 500 +/- 50 degrees C. While the estimates of the eclogites of Zermatt-Saas Zone are in good agreement with some of the previous studies, the contrasting P-T estimates for the TGU eclogites suggest that the Zermatt-Saas complex must be subdivided into several tectonic subunits. The non-uniform peak conditions over the Trockener Steg area and the maximum pressures conditions reported from ultra-high pressure localities within Zermatt-Saas Zone suggest, that individual tectonic slices have been assembled after detachment from the slab at the return-point, i.e. along the exhumation path. Detached packages of rocks may range from small tectonic slices up to several kilometer-sized fragments. The TGU is separated from the surrounding rocks of the ophiolite unit by two major tectonic contacts. In addition, the formation of biotite-rich crusts along the basal contact of the TGU is evidence of prolonged fluid channeling along the basal thrust. The presence of hydrous decompression assemblages replacing earlier formed high-pressure mineral assemblages within the studied eclogite suggests that fluids were present throughout most of the TGU exhumation history. (C) 2015 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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