Granite genesis and the mechanics of convergent orogenic belts with application to the southern Adelaide Fold Belt
- 1 January 1992
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Earth and Environmental Science Transactions of the Royal Society of Edinburgh
- Vol. 83 (1-2) , 83-93
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s026359330000777x
Abstract
Two models for the heating responsible for granite generation during convergent deformation may be distinguished on the basis of the length- and time-scales associated with the thermal perturbation, namely: (1) long-lived, lithospheric-scale heating as a conductive response to the deformation, and (2) transient, localised heating as a response to advective heat sources such as mantle-derived melts. The strong temperature dependence of lithospheric rheology implies that the heat advected within rising granites may affect the distribution and rates of deformation within the developing orogen in a way that reflects the thermal regime attendant on granite formation; this contention is supported by numerical models of lithospheric deformation based on the thin-sheet approximation. The model results are compared with geological and isotopic constraints on granite genesis in the southern Adelaide Fold Belt where intrusion spans a 25 Ma convergent deformation cycle, from about 516 to 490 Ma, resulting in crustal thickening to 50–55 km. High-T metamorphism in this belt is spatially restricted to an axis of magmatic activity where the intensity and complexity of deformation is significantly greater, and may have started earlier, than in adjacent low-grade areas. The implication is that granite generation and emplacement is a causative factor in localising deformation, and on the basis of the results of the mechanical models suggests that granite formation occurred in response to localised, transient crustal heating by mantle melts. This is consistent with the Nd- and Sr-isotopic composition of the granites which seems to reflect mixed sources with components derived both from the depleted contemporary mantle and the older crust.Keywords
This publication has 35 references indexed in Scilit:
- Mechanical consequences of granite emplacement during high-T, low-P metamorphism and the origin of “anticlockwise”PT pathsEarth and Planetary Science Letters, 1991
- Some remarks on high‐temperature—low‐pressure metamorphism in convergent orogensJournal of Metamorphic Geology, 1991
- Orogeny associated with anticlockwise P-T-t paths: Evidence from low-P, high-T metamorphic terranes in the Arunta inlier, central AustraliaGeology, 1991
- The strength of the continental crust, detachment zones and the development of plastic instabilitiesTectonophysics, 1989
- The southeast Australian lithospheric mantle: isotopic and geochemical constraints on its growth and evolutionEarth and Planetary Science Letters, 1987
- Problems in the extrapolation of laboratory rheological dataTectonophysics, 1987
- Diffuse continental deformation: length scales, rates and metamorphic evolutionPhilosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series A, Mathematical and Physical Sciences, 1987
- Vertical averages of rheology of the continental lithosphere: relation to thin sheet parametersEarth and Planetary Science Letters, 1986
- Isotopic and geochemical studies of nodules in kimberlite have implications for the lower continental crustNature, 1982
- Plane-stress finite-element models of tectonic flow in southern CaliforniaPhysics of the Earth and Planetary Interiors, 1980