IGEBA   23946
INSTITUTO DE GEOCIENCIAS BASICAS, APLICADAS Y AMBIENTALES DE BUENOS AIRES
Unidad Ejecutora - UE
artículos
Título:
Dating recurrent shear zone activity and the transition from ductile to brittle deformation: White mica geochronology applied to the Neoproterozoic Dom Feliciano Belt in South Brazil
Autor/es:
HUECK, MATHIAS; PHILIPP, RUY P.; OYHANTÇABAL, PEDRO; BASEI, MIGUEL A.S.; HEIDELBACH, FLORIAN; WEMMER, KLAUS; ORIOLO, SEBASTIÁN; SIEGESMUND, SIEGFRIED
Revista:
JOURNAL OF STRUCTURAL GEOLOGY
Editorial:
PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
Referencias:
Año: 2020 vol. 141
ISSN:
0191-8141
Resumen:
Argon geochronology of white mica has a good potential of recording recurrent dynamic recrystallization in shear zones in the transition from ductile to brittle deformation, as temperature ranges for mineral crystallization and isotopic closure of different grain-size fractions overlap between ca. 275?425 °C. This study presents over 40 K-Ar ages of coarse-grained muscovite and multiple clay-sized white mica fractions extracted from mylonites and fault gouges in southernmost Brazil, complemented by detailed structural and XRD characterization. The widespread obtained ages are best explained in the context of recurrent deformation under retrograde conditions during progressive strain localization and transition from low-grade ductile deformation into brittle faulting. The onset of the Ibaré Shear Zone is constrained in the Tonian, followed by reactivation during the Ediacaran evolution of the adjacent Dom Feliciano Belt, which records a remarkable long-term history of recurrent deformation for over 100 Myr. New data extends the geochronological constraints of the Dorsal do Canguçu Shear Zone into low-temperature conditions, estimating the onset of brittle activity at 525-470 Ma by dating early fault gouges formed shortly after final syn-kinematic white mica crystallization in the hosting mylonites. Dating of recurrent faulting events during the Paleo-Mesozoic complement the regional sedimentary and thermochronological record.