1 / 19

Metamorphic core complex

Earth 238-26. Metamorphic core complex. *Geological context: syn to post-orogenic extension -interpreted as MCC for the first time in 1980 in the « Basin and Range » province (North American Cordillera)

megara
Télécharger la présentation

Metamorphic core complex

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Earth 238-26 Metamorphic core complex *Geological context: syn to post-orogenic extension -interpreted as MCC for the first time in 1980 in the « Basin and Range » province (North American Cordillera) -usually formed in a region of thick crust which is gravitationally unstable, and occur in areas of synextensional magmatism

  2. Earth 238-26 Metamorphic core complex *Gravitational collapse of a thicken crust The crust was gravitationally unstable and spread outward under its own weight. The origin of the spreading coming from a reduction of viscosity by a mantle derived heating event (Coney, 1987), thermal relaxation of the overthickened crust (Sonder, et el., 1987), or collapse and steepening of a previously shallow-dipping Laramide Benioff zone, which may have reduced the regional stress and possibly started extension (Coney and Harms, 1984).

  3. Earth 238-26 Metamorphic core complex *Slab break-off http://www.mantleplumes.org/Anatolia.html

  4. Earth 238-26 Metamorphic core complex *Lithospheric delamination http://www.gfz-potsdam.de/pb2/pb24/projects/indepth/twolines/twolines.html

  5. Earth 238-26 Metamorphic core complex *Characteristics and geometry

  6. Earth 238-26 Metamorphic core complex «Basin and Range » province

  7. Earth 238-26 Metamorphic core complex

  8. Earth 238-26 Metamorphic core complex

  9. Earth 238-26 Metamorphic core complex *Rolling Hinge: Werneke (1985): simple shear model 3 Ma Low angle normal faulting reaches deep into the crust. Shearing takes place and mylonites form. 14 Ma Subaerial denudation, and core complex emplacement. 8 Ma Mylonites are pulled to the surface by normal faulting displacement, unroofing causes isostatic doming

  10. Earth 238-26 Metamorphic core complex *Isostatic Uplift: Werneke and Axen (1988) *Initial faulting at high angle *Isostatic uplift which causes the rotation of the fault. Mohr-Coulomb criteria is respected.

  11. Earth 238-26 Metamorphic core complex *Combination of Isostatic Uplift, simple shearing and pure shearing: Lister and Davis (1989)

  12. Earth 238-26 Metamorphic core complex *Flexural Uplift: Spencer, 1984

  13. Earth 238-26 Metamorphic core complex *To sum up:

  14. Earth 238-26 Metamorphic core complex

  15. Earth 238-26 Metamorphic core complex *All these models postulate a low angle detachment is present at the beginning of the extensional process. *These models show an uplift of the Moho. However, a lot of seismic profile surveys have shown a flat Moho under a lot of Metamorhic Core Complex.

  16. Earth 238-26 Metamorphic core complex *Magmatic Underplating or Intrusion

  17. Earth 238-26 Metamorphic core complex *Crustal Flow Model: (convergent crustal flow) When the hanging wall of a normal detachment fault is thinned, the vertical load that acts on the layers below it is reduced. This creates a horizontal pressure gradient at depth and will drive a lateral flow upward to equalize the gradient.

  18. Earth 238-26 Metamorphic core complex *Crustal Flow Model: (divergent crustal flow)

  19. Earth 238-26 Metamorphic core complex *Remain a question: is a low angle detachment necessary at the beginning of the crustal thinning ? *Need to have a new approach: Numerical and analogue modelling Ex: for analogue modelling: the brittle crust is modelled by sand and the ductile crust by silicone (1/3 of sand, 2/3 of silicone) We can introduce also a viscosity anomaly at the interface brittle-ductile to model weakness zone *Numerical and analogue modelling have shown that it is not necessary to have a low angle detachment at the initial stage. This flat shear zone could be the consequence of the extension process.The shear zone develops where weakness anomalies exist. (C.Tirel,2004; Tirel et al., 2004)

More Related