Abstract
AbstractThe Sanbagawa high‐pressure schists from central Shikoku in Southwest Japan have experienced high‐strain ductile deformation during exhumation and cooling. This study examines the effects of high‐strain ductile deformation on K–Ar ages of phengites on the basis of fabric, chemistry and K–Ar ages of phengites from the pelitic, psammitic and quartzose (or albitic) schists collected from the same outcrop in the albite–biotite zone. Phengites in the pelitic and psammitic schists generally occur forming aggregates consisting of fine‐grained phengite crystals and are extremely fine‐grained in domains close to relatively rigid garnet and albite porphyroblasts, indicating that deformation‐induced grain‐size reduction had taken place in phengite during the ductile deformation accompanying the exhumation of host schists. We suggest that the grain‐size reduction of phengite is due to strain‐induced recrystallization or dynamic recrystallization. The matrix phengites in schists are chemically heterogeneous on the thin‐section scale but the phengites from pelitic and psammitic schists from the same outcrop have similar chemical range. Phengite included in garnet has a high Si value and its Na/(Na + K) and Mg/(Mg + Fe) ratios are significantly low in comparison with those in matrix. The phengite included in garnet records the chemistry in equilibrium with other major silicate phases during the higher pressure stage of the P–T–t history of the schists. In contrast, the matrix phengites having low Si values are likely to have been formed during retrograde metamorphism in extremely restricted equilibrium domains. The two or three different types of schists from the same outcrop, which have a similar grain size of phengite, have similar K–Ar ages, suggesting that the closure temperature does not depend on chemistry. However, the hematite‐rich quartzose schist with strong grain‐size reduction of both phengite and quartz has a significantly younger K–Ar phengite age than the pelitic and quartzose schists in the same outcrop that do not show grain‐size reduction. We suggest that the exhumation tectonics of the schists, which have experienced strong ductile deformation at temperatures less than ~350°C, played an important role resulting in the observed variation in age.
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