Abstract

In this contribution, we present new petrochronological results from samples collected the Shabogamo Domain, of the Grenville Province, Québec, Canada. The Shabogamo domain has a distinct geophysical signature and has been proposed to be linked with the well-studied allochthonous Manicouagan Imbricate Zone. We document a Pressure-Temperature-time (P-T-t) path for an amphibolite sample by combining several approaches including: i) an ordinary least square model able to estimate P-T conditions from amphibole composition using a previously semi-quantitative amphibole thermobarometer ii) titanite petrochronology; iii) phase equilibria modelling; iv) trace element thermometry. We show that single element thermobarometry on titanite and amphibole pairs yield the information necessary to reconstruct a decompression P-T path from peak P-T conditions of 1.8 GPa – 775 °C down to 1.2 GPa – 750 °C and are consistent with results of phase equilibria modelling. Titanite U-Pb geochronology results indicate growth between 987 ± 16 Ma and 969 ± 17 Ma. These results are consistent with U-Pb geochronology on zircon from a dyke that crosscuts the amphibolite and from a deformed leucosome sampled in the domain’s footwall. Zircon from the crosscutting dyke appear to have grown at 985 ± 18 Ma without interaction with garnet, whereas zircon from the deformed leucosomes grew at 972 ± 16 Ma during high-pressure metamorphism. Integrating the results of this study into the regional context outlines the exhumation of a second high-P allochthonous nappe, most likely by ductile extrusion, coeval with the burial of the parautochthonous footwall. This study further supports the growing body of evidence for a major tectonic event during the later phase of the Grenvillian Orogeny.

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