Abstract

Abstract In the Western Gneiss Region (WGR) in the Scandinavian Caledonides, Scandian ecologites ( P = 16 to >28 kbar) occur in a large area of reworked Proterozoic gneisses, structurally below a series of Scandian nappes. The top-to-the-west, extensional Nordfjord-Sogn Detachment (NSD) separates the WGR from allochthonous units, which include several late-orogenic Devonian basins. The allochthon has not experienced Scandian high-pressure (HP) metamorphism. Below the NSD, the WGR is intensely deformed under late-orogenic amphibolite-facies conditions. This deformation is bulk-constrictional, as indicated by a linear feldspar fabric within augen gneisses and tight to isoclinal, lineation-parallel folds within layered gneisses. In a later stage, the NSD, the WGR and the Devonian basins were folded by east-west trending folds, coeval with continuing movement along detachments. To explain these features we propose a transtensional model for the late-orogenic evolution of the WGR. Transtension in West Norway had a sinistral sense and was partially partitioned with increasing transtensional angle towards the NE-SW trending Møre-Trøndelag Fault Zone in the NW. During transtension, there is a strong tendency for rejuvenation of detachments, because detachments fold and may lock as they move. In the WGR, the younger Hornelen Detachment developed above the older NSD. Transtension was the principal exhumation mechanism of the HP and ultra-high-pressure (UHP) rocks in the WGR and involved oblique plate divergence of Laurentia and Baltica during the Early Devonian.

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