Abstract

AbstractThe Albany–Fraser Orogen in southwestern Australia preserves an important thermo‐tectonic record of Australo‐Antarctic cratonic assembly during the Mesoproterozoic. New petrologic and thermobarometric data from the Coramup Gneiss (a 10 km wide zone of high strain rocks within the NE‐trending eastern Albany–Fraser Orogen) indicate at least two high‐grade metamorphic events during 1345–1140 Ma convergence and amalgamation of the West Australian and Mawson cratons. The first event (M1) involved c. 1300 Ma granulite facies metamorphism of the Coramup Gneiss (M1a: 800–850 °C, 5–7 kbar), followed by burial and recrystallization under high‐P conditions (M1b: 800–850 °C, c. 10 kbar) prior to high‐T decompression (M1c: 700–800 °C, 7–8 kbar) and the 1290–1280 Ma emplacement of Recherche Granite sills. The second event (M2) entailed high‐T, low‐P metamorphism within dextral D2 shear zones (M2a: 750–800 °C, 5–6 kbar), followed by fluid‐present amphibolite facies M2b retrogression. Subsequent sinistral D3 mylonites and pseudotachylites are considered contemporaneous with similar structures in the adjacent Nornalup Complex that postdate the c. 1140 Ma Esperance Granite. Our petrological and thermobarometric data permit two end‐member P–T‐time relationships between M1 and M2: (1) a single post‐M1b event involving continuous M1b–M1c–M2a–M2b cooling and decompression, and (2) a two‐stage post‐M1b evolution involving M1c metamorphism during the waning stages of an event unrelated causally or temporally to subsequent M2a metamorphism and D2 deformation. In a companion paper, new structural and U–Pb SHRIMP zircon data are presented to support a two‐stage P–T evolution for the Coramup Gneiss, with M1 and M2, respectively, reflecting thermo‐tectonic activity during Stage I (1345–1260 Ma) and Stage II (1215–1140 Ma) of the Albany–Fraser Orogeny.

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