Melt-present shear zones enable intracontinental orogenesis

Date

2020

Authors

Piazolo, S.
Daczko, N.R.
Silva, D.
Raimondo, T.

Editors

Advisors

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Type:

Journal article

Citation

Geology, 2020; 48(7):643-648

Statement of Responsibility

Sandra Piazolo, Nathan R. Daczko, David Silva and Tom Raimondo

Conference Name

Abstract

Localized rheological weakening is required to initiate and sustain intracontinental orogenesis, but the reasons for weakening remain debated. The intracontinental Alice Springs orogen dominates the lithospheric architecture of central Australia and involved prolonged (450–300 Ma) but episodic mountain building. The mid-crustal core of the orogen is exposed at its eastern margin, where field relationships and microstructures demonstrate that deformation was accommodated in biotite-rich shear zones. Rheological weakening was caused by localized melt-present deformation coupled with melt-induced reaction softening. This interpretation is supported by the coeval and episodic nature of melt-present deformation, igneous activity, and sediment shed from the developing orogen. This study identifies localized melt availability as an important ingredient enabling intracontinental orogenesis.

School/Discipline

Dissertation Note

Provenance

Description

Access Status

Rights

© 2020 Geological Society of America. For permission to copy, contact editing@geosociety.org.

License

Call number

Persistent link to this record