4.6 Review

Early paleozoic tectonic and thermomechanical evolution of ultrahigh-pressure (UHP) metamorphic rocks in the northern Tibetan plateau, northwest China

期刊

INTERNATIONAL GEOLOGY REVIEW
卷 49, 期 8, 页码 681-716

出版社

TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
DOI: 10.2747/0020-6814.49.8.681

关键词

-

类别

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Coesite- and diamond-bearing ultrahigh-pressure (UHP) metamorphic rocks represent continental materials that were once subducted to depths of > 90 km. Identifying how these rocks were subsequently returned to Earth's surface has been a major challenge. Opinions on this,natter vary widely, ranging from vertical extrusion of a coherent continental slab to channel flow of tectonically mixed melange. To address this problem, we conducted integrated research across the North Qaidam UHP metamorphic belt using structural mapping, petrologic studies, and geochronologic and thermochronologic analyses. Our regional synthesis indicates that. the early Paleozoic Qilian orogen within which the North Qaidam UHP metamorphic belt was developed, was created by protracted southward oceanic subduction. The process produced a wide melange belt and the Qilian magmatic arc. Arc magmatism was active between 520 and 400 Ma, coeval with North Qaidam UHP metamorphism. The North Qaidam UHP metamorphic belt also spatially overlaps the early Paleozoic Qilian magmatic arc. Petrologic, geochronologic, and geochemical studies indicate that the protolith of the UHP metamorphic rocks was a mixture of continental and mafic/ultramafic materials, derived either from oceanic melanges or pieces of a rifted continental margin tectonically incorporated into an oceanic subduction channel. These observations require that the North Qaidam UHP metamorphic rocks originated at least in part from continental crust that was subducted to mantle depths and then transported across a mantle wedge into a coeval arc during oceanic subduction. Upward transport of the UHP rocks may have been accommodated by rising diapirs launched from a melange channel on top of an oceanic subducting slab. To test this hypothesis, we developed a quantitative model that incorporates existing knowledge on thermal structures of subduction zones into the mechanics of diapir transport. Using this model, we are able to track P-T and T-t paths of individual diapirs and compare them with the observed P-T and T-t paths from North Qaidam. The main physical insight gained from our modeling is that the large variation of the observed North Qaidam P-T paths can be explained by a combination of temporal and spatial variation of thermal structure and mechanical strength of the mantle wedge above the early Paleozoic Qilian subduction slab. Hotter P-T trajectories can be explained by a high initial temperature (similar to 800 degrees C) of a diapir that travels across a relatively strong mantle wedge (i.e., activation energy E = 350 Whim] for dry olivine), while cooler P-T paths may be explained by a diapir with initially low temperature (similar to 700 degrees C) that traveled through a weaker mantle wedge, with its strength at least two orders of magnitude lower than that of dry olivine. This latter condition could have been achieved by hydraulic weakening of olivine aggregates in the mantle wedge via fluid percolation through the mantle wedge during oceanic subduclion.

作者

我是这篇论文的作者
点击您的名字以认领此论文并将其添加到您的个人资料中。

评论

主要评分

4.6
评分不足

次要评分

新颖性
-
重要性
-
科学严谨性
-
评价这篇论文

推荐

暂无数据
暂无数据