Abstract
Garnet-bearing metapelites in the Helvetic and Austroalpine pre-Mesozoic polymetamorphic basement are characterised by pressure-temperature path segments reconstructed by microstructurally controlled geothermobarometry, and the Th-U-Pb monazite age distribution pattern revealed by the electron probe microanalyser (EPMA). In the Helvetic Aiguilles Rouges Massif and the Austroalpine Oetztal-Stubai basement to the NW an Ordovician-to-Silurian high temperature event preceded a pressure-dominated Carboniferous metamorphism. In the Austroalpine basement units to the south of the Tauern Window, the maximal pressures of the Carboniferous amphibolite-facies metamorphism range from 12 to 6 kbar. The decompressional P-T path segments signal a transition to low pressure conditions. A subsequent high pressure overprint is restricted to the Prijakt Subgroup unit in the Schobergruppe and documented by Cretaceous monazite crystallisation at 88 ± 6 Ma. In the Austroalpine Saualpe basement to the SE, a distinct early Permian metamorphism which started at low pressures of ~4 kbar/500 °C and reached maximal 6 kbar/600–650 °C predated the intrusion of Permian pegmatites. Permian monazite crystallised in line with the intrusion of pegmatites. Corona microstructures around the Permian monazites indicate retrogression previous to a Cretaceous high pressure metamorphism. That way, pressure-temperature-time paths resolve the spatial and temporal evolution in the polymetamorphic Alpine basement prior to the Tertiary collision.
Highlights
IntroductionA major part of the Alps is composed of basement units
The massif is composed of metapelites and metagreywackes, diopside marbles, orthogneisses, garnet amphibolites, migmatites, eclogites, meta-ultrabasites and granulites
Paleozoic protolith ages of magmatic rocks came into discussion [46]
Summary
A major part of the Alps is composed of basement units These units can be assigned to the continental Northern European Plate, to the overriding Austroalpine parts of the Adriatic-Apulian Plate, and to metamorphosed Mesozoic ophiolites and sediments belonging to the Penninic Ocean in between [1]. Ordovician-to-Silurian, Carboniferous and Permian events, followed by the Alpine Cretaceous and Tertiary metamorphism have been reported [2]. In this complex tectonic and metamorphic frame of the Alpine basement, the dating of individual metamorphic events is difficult. U-Pb zircon dating potentially fails to date metamorphism in the greenschist to amphibolite facies and in many high grade metamorphic rocks due to high closure temperatures
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