Abstract

AbstractThe Camarat Granitic Complex (CGC), emplaced in the migmatitic Internal Zone of the Maures–Tanneron Massif (MTM), SE Variscides, consists of the Gigaro granodiorite and the composite Camarat granite. U‐Pb dating of the latter gives crystallization ages of 304.5 ± 3.3 Ma (zircon date) and 303.5 ± 4.0 Ma (monazite date). Two representatives of late felsic dykes cutting across the MTM Internal Zone have 39Ar/40Ar muscovite ages of 302.43 ± 2.62 Ma and 298.11 ± 2.38. Magmatic lineations revealed by anisotropy of magnetic susceptibility (AMS) measurements and image analysis, aplite dykes, dyke‐like bodies of cordierite microgranite and joints in the Camarat granite, as well as the late dykes all have orientations consistent with subhorizontal, NNE‐SSW‐trending lineations in the migmatitic country rocks representing the stretching direction of a late‐Variscan transpression phase (D3). The CGC and the late dykes are therefore witness to a thermal event that affected the MTM between ∼305 and ∼298 Ma (late Pennsylvanian–earliest Permian times), at the end of D3 which initiated at ∼325 Ma. Grabens related to post‐Variscan, Permian rifting (D4 phase), which cut across the MTM are WNW‐ESE‐trending, indicating a NNE‐SSW direction of extension, parallel to the previous (D3) lateral horizontal flow. The present results and a comparison with AMS data published for the Corsica–Sardinia Batholith reveal that evolution in the SE Variscides from Devonian–early Carboniferous contraction to Permian extension, through late Carboniferous transpression is characterized by the persistence of a ca. N‐S stretching direction, supporting a strong horizontal, orogen‐parallel crustal flow.

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