Burial, Accretion, and Exhumation of the Metamorphic Sole of the Oman-UAE Ophiolite

Publikationen: Beitrag in FachzeitschriftArtikelForschung(peer-reviewed)

Standard

Burial, Accretion, and Exhumation of the Metamorphic Sole of the Oman-UAE Ophiolite. / Ambrose, Tyler; Searle, Mike; Waters, David et al.
in: Tectonics, Jahrgang 40, Nr. 4, e2020TC006392, 04.2021.

Publikationen: Beitrag in FachzeitschriftArtikelForschung(peer-reviewed)

Harvard

APA

Ambrose, T., Searle, M., Waters, D., Gopon, P., & Forshaw, J. (2021). Burial, Accretion, and Exhumation of the Metamorphic Sole of the Oman-UAE Ophiolite. Tectonics, 40(4), Artikel e2020TC006392. https://doi.org/10.1029/2020TC006392

Vancouver

Ambrose T, Searle M, Waters D, Gopon P, Forshaw J. Burial, Accretion, and Exhumation of the Metamorphic Sole of the Oman-UAE Ophiolite. Tectonics. 2021 Apr;40(4):e2020TC006392. doi: 10.1029/2020TC006392

Author

Ambrose, Tyler ; Searle, Mike ; Waters, David et al. / Burial, Accretion, and Exhumation of the Metamorphic Sole of the Oman-UAE Ophiolite. in: Tectonics. 2021 ; Jahrgang 40, Nr. 4.

Bibtex - Download

@article{e4768a0fd4d14a24a246fdf30183810a,
title = "Burial, Accretion, and Exhumation of the Metamorphic Sole of the Oman-UAE Ophiolite",
abstract = "We conducted petrological analyses of samples collected across a 250-m thick section of the metamorphic sole of Oman-United Arab Emirates ophiolite. Thermobarometric calculations on garnet-clinopyroxene amphibolites (retrogressed granulites) from the top 85 m of sole indicate peak pressure-temperature conditions of 700°–900°C and 10–12 kbar, corresponding to depths of 30–40 km. Structurally lower (85–250 m below peridotite) epidote amphibolites record similar pressures, but temperatures that are ∼100°C lower. We document progressive retrogression of the peak granulite facies assemblage down through amphibolite and greenschist facies pressure-temperature conditions. We propose that pervasive granulite formation in metabasic rocks along the top of the downgoing slab resulted in rheological strengthening that caused the subduction interface to migrate downwards and accrete a slice (the high-temperature sole) to the hanging-wall mantle. Structurally lower thrust slices of epidote and bimineralic amphibolites, as well as interlayered metasedimentary rocks, were subsequently underplated at similar pressures of 10–12 kbar, but lower temperatures, as the subduction zone cooled. Prograde metamorphism of these lower-grade thrust slices released fluids that (re)hydrated the overlying granulites and hanging-wall peridotites. Along with several other recent studies, our results indicate that the base of the ophiolite and the granulite-amphibolite facies part of the metamorphic sole were juxtaposed at depths of 30–40 km. Our results are consistent with other observations from the metamorphic sole and base of the ophiolite that indicate the sole was exhumed along a flattening slab.",
keywords = "Amphibolite, Oman ophiolite, granulite, metamorphic sole, rock rheology, subduction zone",
author = "Tyler Ambrose and Mike Searle and David Waters and Phillip Gopon and Jacob Forshaw",
note = "Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2021. American Geophysical Union. All Rights Reserved.",
year = "2021",
month = apr,
doi = "10.1029/2020TC006392",
language = "English",
volume = "40",
journal = "Tectonics",
issn = "0278-7407",
publisher = "American Geophysical Union",
number = "4",

}

RIS (suitable for import to EndNote) - Download

TY - JOUR

T1 - Burial, Accretion, and Exhumation of the Metamorphic Sole of the Oman-UAE Ophiolite

AU - Ambrose, Tyler

AU - Searle, Mike

AU - Waters, David

AU - Gopon, Phillip

AU - Forshaw, Jacob

N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 2021. American Geophysical Union. All Rights Reserved.

PY - 2021/4

Y1 - 2021/4

N2 - We conducted petrological analyses of samples collected across a 250-m thick section of the metamorphic sole of Oman-United Arab Emirates ophiolite. Thermobarometric calculations on garnet-clinopyroxene amphibolites (retrogressed granulites) from the top 85 m of sole indicate peak pressure-temperature conditions of 700°–900°C and 10–12 kbar, corresponding to depths of 30–40 km. Structurally lower (85–250 m below peridotite) epidote amphibolites record similar pressures, but temperatures that are ∼100°C lower. We document progressive retrogression of the peak granulite facies assemblage down through amphibolite and greenschist facies pressure-temperature conditions. We propose that pervasive granulite formation in metabasic rocks along the top of the downgoing slab resulted in rheological strengthening that caused the subduction interface to migrate downwards and accrete a slice (the high-temperature sole) to the hanging-wall mantle. Structurally lower thrust slices of epidote and bimineralic amphibolites, as well as interlayered metasedimentary rocks, were subsequently underplated at similar pressures of 10–12 kbar, but lower temperatures, as the subduction zone cooled. Prograde metamorphism of these lower-grade thrust slices released fluids that (re)hydrated the overlying granulites and hanging-wall peridotites. Along with several other recent studies, our results indicate that the base of the ophiolite and the granulite-amphibolite facies part of the metamorphic sole were juxtaposed at depths of 30–40 km. Our results are consistent with other observations from the metamorphic sole and base of the ophiolite that indicate the sole was exhumed along a flattening slab.

AB - We conducted petrological analyses of samples collected across a 250-m thick section of the metamorphic sole of Oman-United Arab Emirates ophiolite. Thermobarometric calculations on garnet-clinopyroxene amphibolites (retrogressed granulites) from the top 85 m of sole indicate peak pressure-temperature conditions of 700°–900°C and 10–12 kbar, corresponding to depths of 30–40 km. Structurally lower (85–250 m below peridotite) epidote amphibolites record similar pressures, but temperatures that are ∼100°C lower. We document progressive retrogression of the peak granulite facies assemblage down through amphibolite and greenschist facies pressure-temperature conditions. We propose that pervasive granulite formation in metabasic rocks along the top of the downgoing slab resulted in rheological strengthening that caused the subduction interface to migrate downwards and accrete a slice (the high-temperature sole) to the hanging-wall mantle. Structurally lower thrust slices of epidote and bimineralic amphibolites, as well as interlayered metasedimentary rocks, were subsequently underplated at similar pressures of 10–12 kbar, but lower temperatures, as the subduction zone cooled. Prograde metamorphism of these lower-grade thrust slices released fluids that (re)hydrated the overlying granulites and hanging-wall peridotites. Along with several other recent studies, our results indicate that the base of the ophiolite and the granulite-amphibolite facies part of the metamorphic sole were juxtaposed at depths of 30–40 km. Our results are consistent with other observations from the metamorphic sole and base of the ophiolite that indicate the sole was exhumed along a flattening slab.

KW - Amphibolite

KW - Oman ophiolite

KW - granulite

KW - metamorphic sole

KW - rock rheology

KW - subduction zone

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85104642230&partnerID=8YFLogxK

U2 - 10.1029/2020TC006392

DO - 10.1029/2020TC006392

M3 - Article

VL - 40

JO - Tectonics

JF - Tectonics

SN - 0278-7407

IS - 4

M1 - e2020TC006392

ER -