Significance of MORB-derived Amphibolites from the Aracena Metamorphic Belt, Southwest Spain
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Abstract
The Aracena metamorphic belt, in the southwest Iberian
Massif, is characterized by the presence of MORB-derived
amphibolites and continental rocks deformed and metamorphosed
during the Hercynian orogeny. Geochemical relationships
of these amphibolites indicate the existence of a multiple
fractionation process from a set of parental magmas, implying
the existence of a multi-chamber system beneath the ridge where
the basalt protolith was extruded. Neodymium isotopic ratios are
typical of MORB, and oxygen isotopes indicate that these
amphibolites have been derived from the uppermost part of the
oceanic crust Thermal evolution, revealed from the study of
chemical variations in the amphibole chemistry, is interpreted as
resulting from subduction in a low-pressure regime in which the
thermal structure of the continental hanging-wall played an
important role. This continental wall was previously heated by
subduction of a slab window resulting from migration of a triple
junction along the continental edge during plate convergence.
Three petrologic arguments support this tectonic model These
are: (1) the low-pressure inverted metamorphic gradient of
amphibolites of the oceanic domain; (2) the high-temperaturelow-
pressure metamorphism of the continental hanging wall;
(3) the early intrusion of boninites into the continental domain.
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Bibliographic citation
Castro Dorado, C., Fernández Rodríguez, C., Rosa Díaz, J. de la, Moreno-Ventas Bravo, I.: "Significance of MORB-derived Amphibolites from the Aracena Metamorphic Belt, Southwest Spain". Journal of Petrology. Vol. 37, n. 2, p. 235-260 (1996). ISSN 1460-2415














