4.4 Article

Assessing the importance of H2O content in the tectono-metamorphic evolution of shear zones: A case study from the Dora-Maira Massif (Western Alps)

Journal

JOURNAL OF METAMORPHIC GEOLOGY
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/jmg.12750

Keywords

fluid content; mylonites; phase equilibrium modelling; P-T-MH2O relations; shear zones

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This study investigates the retrograde evolution of the P-T-MH2O pathway in the Mt. Bracco Shear Zone, highlighting the importance of studying water content and the influence of lithological heterogeneities on fluid circulation regimes in shear zones.
Metamorphic reactions are commonly driven to completion within shear zones thanks to fluid circulation, making the re-equilibration of the mineral assemblage one of the dominant processes. Despite the important role of H2O in such processes, forward thermodynamic modelling calculations commonly assume either H2O-saturated conditions or only fluid loss during prograde evolution to peak conditions. These assumptions influence the understanding of shear zones during the retrograde evolution. Here, we investigate the P-T-MH2O retrograde evolution of the Mt. Bracco Shear Zone (MBSZ), an Alpine ductile tectonic contact which marks the boundary between two HP units in the Dora-Maira Massif (Western Alps, Italy). After the eclogite-facies peak (at 500-520 degrees C and 1.8-2.2 GPa), the subsequent mylonitic event is constrained at amphibolite-facies conditions, continuing its evolution at decreasing pressure and temperature during rock exhumation, from similar to 590 degrees C, 1.0 GPa down to similar to 520 degrees C, 0.7 GPa. The P/T-MH2O forward modelling highlights different behaviour for the two analysed samples. After reaching a minimum H2O content at the transition from eclogite- to amphibolite-facies conditions, a significant fluid gain is modelled for only one of the two analysed samples just before the mylonitic event. The MBSZ then evolves towards H2O-undersaturated conditions. This work thus underlines the necessity of investigating the H2O evolution within shear zones, as the H2O content is susceptible to change through the P-T path, due to dehydration reactions or fluid infiltration events. Furthermore, lithological heterogeneities influence possible different fluid circulation regimes in shear zones, resulting in externally or internally derived fluid gain.

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