4.7 Article

Ultrahigh-temperature metamorphism in the Achankovil Zone: Implications for the correlation of crustal blocks in southern India

Journal

GONDWANA RESEARCH
Volume 10, Issue 1-2, Pages 99-114

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.gr.2005.11.019

Keywords

Achankovil Zone; cordierite gneiss; P-T path; ultrahigh-temperature metamorphism; southern India

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The Achankovil Zone of southern India, a NW-SE trending lineament of 8-10 km in width and > 100 km length, is a kinematically debated crustal feature, considered to mark the boundary between the Madurai Granulite Block in the north and the Trivandrum Granulite Block in the south. Both these crustal blocks show evidence for ultrahigh-temperature metamorphism during the Pan-African orogeny, although the exhumation styles are markedly different. The Achankovil Zone is characterized by discontinuous strands of cordierite-bearing gneiss with an assemblage of cordierite + garnet + quartz + plagioclase + spinel + ilmenite + magnetite orthopyroxene biotite K-feldspar sillimanite. The lithology preserves several peak and post-peak metamorphic assemblages including: (1) orthopyroxene+garnet, (2) perthite and/or anti-perthite, (3) cordierite orthopyroxene corona around garnet, and (4) cordierite + quartz symplectite after garnet. We estimate the peak metamorphic conditions of these rocks using orthopyroxene-bearing geothermobarometers and feldspar solvus which yield 8.5-9.5 kbar and 940-1040 degrees C, the highest P-T conditions so far recorded from the Achankovil Zone. The retrograde conditions were obtained from cordierite-bearing geothermobarometers at 3.5-4.5 kbar and 720 +/- 60 degrees C. From orthopyroxene chemistry, we record a multistage exhumation history for these rocks, which is closely comparable with those reported in recent studies from the Madurai Granulite Block, but different from those documented from the Trivandrum Granulite Block. An evaluation of the petrologic and geochronologic data, together with the nature of exhumation paths leads us to propose that the Achankovil Zone is probably the southern flank of the Madurai Granulite Block, and not a unit of the Trivandrum Granulite Block as presently believed. Post-tectonic alkali granites that form an array of suturing plutons along the margin of the Madurai Granulite Block and within the Achankovil Zone, but are absent in the Trivandrum Granulite Block, suggest that the boundary between the Madurai Granulite Block and the Trivandrum Granulite Block might lie along the Tenmalai shear zone at the southern extremity of the Achankovil Zone. (C) 2006 International Association for Gondwana Research. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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