Abstract

The extraction of P-T histories from metamorphic rocks provides a valuable dataset for the elucidation of the tectonic mechanisms for orogeny. While continued re-equilibration frequently obliterates early information, garnet zonation and inclusion assemblages can often surmount this problem. The task is more difficult in high variance assemblages or if inclusions are not preserved, but one approach is to use pseudosections that are specific to the bulk composition of a given rock. In the latter case, the compositions and abundances of all the minerals are fixed at a given P-T point such that, if the effective bulk composition is known, the garnet composition alone can be used to reconstruct the history. Here, we explore this approach using examples from the Zanskar Himalaya, NW India. Pseudosections have been calculated for four pelitic to semipelitic rocks from the Zanskar Himalaya and have been contoured for garnet composition. The calculations adequately model the mineral assemblages in the rocks and predict the presence of chlorite in the early assemblage where chlorite is found as inclusions within garnet. Moreover, the pseudosections successfully model the garnet core compositions, with all three independent compositional contours overlapping at a single pressure and temperature. This occurs at ∼550 °C and at pressures varying from 3–7 kbar for the four rocks studied. We have been less successful, however, at modelling garnet compositions beyond the cores because fractionation of the effective bulk composition is caused by garnet growth itself. However, in this case, a combination of the␣pseudosection and conventional thermobarometry using␣Fe-Ti inclusions and matrix phases allows us to reconstruct␣the entire P-T history. The resulting P-T paths record burial of 3–5 kbar without significant temperature increase followed by isobaric heating of 50–100 °C. This evolution is consistent with Himalayan collision in the early Tertiary but a combination of the P-T data presented here and published geochronological data suggests renewed thrusting south of the suture zone in the Oligocene. In addition, the data demonstrate that no extra heat source is required to cause melting of the Himalayan crust in the Miocene. While melting could have occurred both by dehydration during decompression or in the presence of a fluid, the lack of garnet resorption does suggest decompression was rapid and followed quickly by cooling. This scenario favours melting by decompression.

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