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Rapid exhumation of deep crust in an obliquely convergent orogen: The Kaoko Belt of the Damara Orogen
Author(s) -
Foster David A.,
Goscombe Ben D.,
Gray David R.
Publication year - 2009
Publication title -
tectonics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.465
H-Index - 134
eISSN - 1944-9194
pISSN - 0278-7407
DOI - 10.1029/2008tc002317
Subject(s) - mylonite , geology , shear zone , hornblende , metamorphism , metamorphic rock , craton , geochemistry , greenschist , petrology , transpression , granulite , terrane , seismology , geomorphology , tectonics , biotite , quartz , paleontology , facies , structural basin
The exhumation of deep crustal rocks and juxtaposition of structural‐metamorphic domains from different depths in a transpressional orogen may occur during the prograde evolution of the orogen by vertical extrusion or during the retrograde evolution of the orogen via extension. Metamorphic petrology, kinematics, and thermochronology of strike‐slip shear zones in the Kaoko Belt of the Damara Orogen are used to evaluate extrusion and extension processes in this transpressional orogen. Mineral assemblages and deformation mechanisms record shearing at pressures of 4–6 kbar and temperatures of ∼550°C for the Three Palms mylonite zone, 600–650°C for the Purros mylonite zone, and ∼630–700°C for the Village and Khumib mylonite zones. The Three Palms mylonite zone, which separates the accreted Coastal Terrane from the former passive margin of the Congo Craton, exhibits progressive deformation during decreasing temperatures through lower greenschist facies and into the brittle field, with consistent oblique normal shear indicators. Lower‐temperature fabrics and brittle features also overprint the Village mylonite zone. The 207 Pb‐ 206 Pb (titanite) and 40 Ar/ 39 Ar (hornblende, muscovite, and biotite) data indicate rapid cooling, at rates of 30–100°C/Ma, of all high‐grade structural domains in the core of the Kaoko Belt between circa 535 and 525 Ma, which is about 20–30 Ma younger then peak metamorphism. The 40 Ar/ 39 Ar data from synkinematic muscovite fish in the retrograde shear zone assemblages indicate that the Khumib, Village, and Three Palms mylonite zones were actively deforming at temperatures below 350°C at circa 530–524 Ma. These data indicate that the high‐grade metamorphic rocks of the Kaoko were rapidly exhumed and juxtaposed after the main transpressive deformation by oblique extension. Reactivation of the shear zones and tectonic exhumation of high‐grade structural domains from beneath the accreted Coastal Terrane was caused by collision in the Damara Belt and terminal accretion of Gondwana.