Abstract

Finite strain analyses were performed on a deformed metaconglomerate from the Calamita Unit in the Island of Elba. The Calamita Unit is a synkinematic contact aureole that was shaped by Late Miocene contractional deformation coeval with high‐temperature metamorphism. The metaconglomerate occurs as an L‐tectonite in the footwall of a major thrust, entirely surrounded by S‐tectonites developed in schistose rocks. Object lineations, defined by the preferred orientation of clasts, trend subparallel to the stretching lineations in the associated rocks. Quartz microstructures registered ductile deformation of clasts by grain boundary migration to bulging recrystallization, suggesting temperature decrease during deformation. Rf/ϕ analyses were carried out on three metaconglomerate samples using quartzite clasts as markers. The finite strain data show that the metaconglomerates are strongly deformed in the constrictional field with K values between ~3 and ~7. The constrictional deformation registered by the metaconglomerate with respect to the surrounding metapelites, which likely deformed under plane strain, can be interpreted as the result of flow partitioning in rheologically heterogeneous sequences during deformation. These results suggest the presence of significant strain gradients in the Calamita Unit, strictly associated with heterogeneously distributed ductile shear zones.

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