Rapid development of spiral garnets during subduction zone metamorphism revealed from high-resolution Sm-Nd garnet geochronology
Metadatos
Afficher la notice complèteAuteur
Farrell, Thomas P.; Aerden, Domingo Gerard; Baxter, Ethan F.; Starr, Paul G.; Williams, Mike L.Editorial
Geological Society of America
Date
2024-01-25Referencia bibliográfica
Farrell, T.P., et al., 2024, Rapid development of spiral garnets during subduction zone metamorphism revealed from high-resolution Sm-Nd garnet geochronology: Geology, v. XX, p. XXX–XXX, https://doi.org/10.1130/G51882.1
Patrocinador
Spanish grants CGL2015–65602-R (AEI-FEDER), P18-RT-3275, and B-RNM-301-UGR18 (Junta de Andaucía/FEDER); U.S. National Science Foundation grants PIRE-1545903 and EAR-1946651Résumé
Multiple studies have applied zoned garnet geochronology to place temporal constraints on
the rates of metamorphism and deformation during orogenesis. We report new high-resolution
isotope dilution–thermal ionization mass spectrometry Sm-Nd isochron ages on concentric
growth zones from microstructurally and thermodynamically characterized garnets from
the Betic Cordillera, southern Spain. Our ages for the garnet core (13.64 ± 0.31 Ma), mantle
(13.41 ± 0.37 Ma), and rim (13.34 ± 0.45 Ma) indicate rapid garnet growth and are consistent
with published garnet ages interpreted to reflect high-pressure metamorphism in the
region. Thermodynamic analysis indicates garnets grew during subduction at ∼1.5–2.0 GPa
and 570–600 °C. The core to rim duration of spiral garnet growth was just a few hundred
thousand years. While other zoned garnet studies have shown similar rapid growth in subduction
zone settings, this is the first documentation of such rapid growth of a spiral garnet.
Combining this garnet growth duration with the magnitude of spiral inclusion trail curvature,
we compute a strain rate of ∼10−13 s−1, an order of magnitude faster than all previous spiral
garnet studies. We interpret that these spiral garnets recorded a rapid pulse of deformation
and strain during the final stages of subduction and incipient exhumation.