Abstract

In the Himalayan region of Sikkim, the well-developed inverted metamorphic sequence of the Main Central Thrust (MCT) zone is folded, thus exposing several transects through the structure that reached similar metamorphic grades at different times. In-situ LA-ICP-MS U–Th–Pb monazite ages, linked to pressure–temperature conditions via trace-element reaction fingerprints, allow key aspects of the evolution of the thrust zone to be understood for the first time. The ages show that peak metamorphic conditions were reached earliest in the structurally highest part of the inverted metamorphic sequence, in the Greater Himalayan Sequence (GHS) in the hanging wall of the MCT. Monazite in this unit grew over a prolonged period between ∼37 and 16 Ma in the southerly leading-edge of the thrust zone and between ∼37 and 14.5 Ma in the northern rear-edge of the thrust zone, at peak metamorphic conditions of ∼790 °C and 10 kbar. Monazite ages in Lesser Himalayan Sequence (LHS) footwall rocks show that identical metamorphic conditions were reached ∼4–6 Ma apart along the ∼60 km separating samples along the MCT transport direction. Upper LHS footwall rocks reached peak metamorphic conditions of ∼655 °C and 9 kbar between ∼21 and 16 Ma in the more southerly-exposed transect and ∼14.5–12 Ma in the northern transect. Similarly, lower LHS footwall rocks reached peak metamorphic conditions of ∼580 °C and 8.5 kbar at ∼16 Ma in the south, and 9–10 Ma in the north. In the southern transect, the timing of partial melting in the GHS hanging wall (∼23–19.5 Ma) overlaps with the timing of prograde metamorphism (∼21 Ma) in the LHS footwall, confirming that the hanging wall may have provided the heat necessary for the metamorphism of the footwall.Overall, the data provide robust evidence for progressively downwards-penetrating deformation and accretion of original LHS footwall material to the GHS hanging wall over a period of ∼5 Ma. These processes appear to have occurred several times during the prolonged ductile evolution of the thrust. The preserved inverted metamorphic sequence therefore documents the formation of sequential ‘paleo-thrusts’ through time, cutting down from the original locus of MCT movement at the LHS–GHS protolith boundary and forming at successively lower pressure and temperature conditions. The petrochronologic methods applied here constrain a complex temporal and thermal deformation history, and demonstrate that inverted metamorphic sequences can preserve a rich record of the duration of progressive ductile thrusting.

Highlights

  • Garnets are unzoned in major elements (Fig. 2a), contain inclusions of monazite and yield an average composition of XCa = 0.04, XMg = 0.17, XFe = 0.76 and XMn = 0.03

  • Whereas the P –T data in this study indicate that the metamorphic history of samples from the same structural level across the Main Central Thrust (MCT) was similar, monazite ages yielded from the samples around the MCT exposure are different (Fig. 6; supplementary material S4 and supplementary data table)

  • The MCT zone in the Sikkim Himalaya represents a zone of inverted metamorphism in which the age and grade of metamorphism decreases with depth within the thrust zone

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Summary

Introduction

Kidder et al, 2013), and in continental collisional thrusts zones, such as in the Caledonides (Andreasson and Lagerblad, 1980), the Appalachians (Camiré et al, 1995), the Variscan belt (Burg et al, 1984; Pitra et al, 2010), the Canadian Cordillera (Crowley and Parrish, 1999; Gibson et al, 1999) and the Himalaya (Gansser, 1964) In these locations, an apparent inverted metamorphic field gradient is preserved, whereby the pressure–temperature ( P –T ) conditions of rock formation decrease with structural depth. These zones provide an ideal natural laboratory to explore the thermal and temporal evolution of a fundamental geological mechanism in continental collisional events

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