Abstract

ABSTRACT The Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta Massif (SNSM) in the Northern Andes affords an insight into lower crustal section structural relations. This polymetamorphic basement comprises high-grade gneisses, which alternate with imbricate slivers of medium-to high-grade schists. New field observations coupled with LA-ICP-MS U-Pb zircon geochronology and trace element geochemistry reveal some hallmarks on the evolution of this strongly remobilized crustal section. The Proterozoic Rodinia-type basement (1100 − 880 Ma) recorded at least two separated tectono-metamorphic events (M0 and M1) and was subsequently affected by a magmatic episode during the Ordovician (~450 Ma; M2). During the Permian, subduction of Panthalassian oceanic crust beneath Pangaea led to the installation of a magmatic-arc and probably coeval metamorphism (~288-266 Ma; M3). Middle-Late Triassic roll-back extension of the upper plate led to anatexis and metamorphism (M4) reaching peak conditions at ca. 239 Ma with concurrent crystallization of garnet and sillimanite, followed by a decreasing geothermal gradient at ca. 202 Ma. Early Jurassic arc build-up under a rejuvenated convergence was contemporaneous to metamorphism on an accretionary wedge (M5) at ca. 185 Ma. The SNSM Massif basement units yield metamorphic ages that compare to similar tectono-metamorphic provinces in NW-Gondwana, including the Central Cordillera of Colombia, the Guajira Peninsula, the Mérida Andes, the Perijá Range, the Santander Massif, and the Central American and Mexican terranes to the south of the Ouachita-Marathon Suture (Oaxaquia, Mixteca, and Maya blocks). Age equivalence of these events is best explained by the existence of a conjugate margin with Laurentia until the Late Triassic ~216 Ma, which preceded the inception of a Colombian marginal seaway during the break-up of western Pangaea. Furthermore, the presence of Ordovician metamorphic rocks in the SNSM Massif confirms the extent of a Famatinian arc along NW-Gondwana during the Early Palaeozoic.

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