40Ar/39Ar Age Constraints on HP/LT Metamorphism in Extensively Overprinted Units: The Example of the Alpujárride Subduction Complex (Betic Cordillera, Spain)
Metadatos
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Wiley
Fecha
2022-01-10Referencia bibliográfica
Bessière, E., Scaillet, S., Augier, R., Jolivet, L., Miguel Azañón, J., Booth- Rea, G., et al. (2022). 40Ar/39Ar age constraints on HP/LT metamorphism in extensively overprinted units: The example of the Alpujárride subduction complex (Betic Cordillera, Spain). Tectonics, 41, e2021TC006889. [https://doi.org/10.1029/2021TC006889]
Patrocinador
CAMPARIS; ISTeP; Institut des Sciences de la Terre d’Orléans; Région Centre; Yann Rolland; European Research Council 290864; Labex ANR‐10‐LABX‐100‐01, ANR‐11‐EQPX‐0036; Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique; Bureau de Recherches Géologiques et Minières; Total CGL2015‐67130‐ C2‐1‐R; Sorbonne UniversitéResumen
Widespread overprinting of early high-pressure/low-temperature (HP/LT) subduction stages
due to subsequent collisional or late-orogenic tectono-metamorphic events is a common feature affecting
the interpretation of geochronologic data from HP/LT orogens. The Betic-Rif orogen is exemplary in this
connection as a great majority of published radiometric ages are found to cluster around 20 Ma. This clustering
is commonly interpreted as reflecting a short, yet complex, succession of tectono-metamorphic events spanning
only over a few Myr, including back-arc extension and overthrusting of the Internal Zones on the External
Zones. An alternative explanation consists in the poor preservation of a much earlier HP/LT metamorphic
event, presumably Eocene, coeval with subduction and crustal thickening in the Internal Zones, and particularly
the Alpujárride Complex. However, this age is vividly debated due to widespread resetting by the Early
Miocene HT/LP overprint. In this study, we provide new 40Ar/39Ar evidence from white micas selected along
an E-W section of the Internal Betics, from the central to the eastern Alpujárride Complex. Our new data show
(a) that exceptionally well-preserved HP/LT parageneses in this unit retain a well-defined Eocene age around
38 Ma, and (b) that widespread 20 Ma ages recorded all along the section correspond to a regional stage of
exhumation, coeval with a major change in the kinematics of back-arc extension. Our study provides conclusive
evidence that 40Ar/39Ar dating of carefully targeted HP/LT associations can overcome the problem of extensive
late-orogenic overprinting, testifying for an Eocene HP event around 38 Ma in the Betic-Rif orogen.