Abstract

In the Migmatite Complex from NE Sardinia, a large lensoid body of coarse-grained, dark-green amphibolite with a schistose to weakly massive aspect crops out. Within this amphibolite centimetre-sized layers locally occur which contain millimetric porphyroblastic garnet. We investigated the amphibolite and the layers applying microstructural analyses and thermodynamic modelling in the NCKFMASH+Ti + Mn system in order to reconstruct the pressure-temperature (P-T) metamorphic evolution. The amphibolite underwent a burial path, recorded by the compositional zoning of garnet, that started at pressures of 0.8 GPa and showed only a slight increase in temperature leading to peak P-T conditions. The garnet rim records peak P-T conditions of 1.3–1.4 GPa at 690–740 °C. As the early exhumation of the amphibolites occurred already at lower temperatures than the burial, an anticlockwise P-T path results which is in contrast to the typical clockwise P-T paths reported for several high-pressure metamorphic rocks from NE Sardinia. We interpret the anti-clockwise path by the location of the studied rocks in the lowermost part of the upper plate and their burial to depths of around 45 km during the Variscan continental collision between Laurussia and Gondwana. This process could have affected some rock slices of the upper plate only owing to tectonic erosion by the downgoing plate. The subsequent uplift occurred in an exhumation channel where these slices were continuously cooled by the upper portion of the lower continental plate.

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