Timing of metamorphism and deformation in the Swat valley, northern Pakistan: Insight into garnet-monazite HREE partitioning

New metamorphic petrology and geochronology from the Loe Sar dome in the Swat region of northern Pakistan place refined constraints on the pressure, temperature and timing of metamorphism and deformation in that part of the Himalayan orogen. Thermodynamic modelling and monazite petrochronology indic...

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Main Authors: Kyle P. Larson, Asghar Ali, Sudip Shrestha, Mathieu Soret, John M. Cottle, Rafique Ahmad
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2019-05-01
Series:Geoscience Frontiers
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1674987118300689
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spelling doaj-77de4f0ab25845c5b34bc6663f1875042020-11-25T00:33:51ZengElsevierGeoscience Frontiers1674-98712019-05-01103849861Timing of metamorphism and deformation in the Swat valley, northern Pakistan: Insight into garnet-monazite HREE partitioningKyle P. Larson0Asghar Ali1Sudip Shrestha2Mathieu Soret3John M. Cottle4Rafique Ahmad5University of British Columbia, Okanagan, Earth, Environmental and Geographic Sciences, Kelowna, BC, Canada; Corresponding author.University of British Columbia, Okanagan, Earth, Environmental and Geographic Sciences, Kelowna, BC, Canada; University of Peshawar, Department of Geology, Peshawar, Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa, PakistanUniversity of British Columbia, Okanagan, Earth, Environmental and Geographic Sciences, Kelowna, BC, CanadaUniversity of British Columbia, Okanagan, Earth, Environmental and Geographic Sciences, Kelowna, BC, CanadaUniversity of California, Santa Barbara, Department of Earth Sciences, Santa Barbara, CA, United StatesThe Bacha Khan University, Department of Geology, Charsadda, Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa, PakistanNew metamorphic petrology and geochronology from the Loe Sar dome in the Swat region of northern Pakistan place refined constraints on the pressure, temperature and timing of metamorphism and deformation in that part of the Himalayan orogen. Thermodynamic modelling and monazite petrochronology indicate that metamorphism in the area followed a prograde evolution from ∼525 ± 25 °C and 6 ± 0.5 kbar to ∼610 ± 25 °C and 9 ± 0.5 kbar, between ca. 39 Ma and 28 Ma. Partitioning of heavy rare earth elements between garnet rims and 30–28 Ma monazite are interpreted to indicate coeval crystallization at peak conditions. Microtextural relationships indicate that garnet rim growth post-dated the development of the main foliation in the area. The regional foliation is folded about large-scale N–S trending fold axes and overprinting E–W trending folds to form km-scale domal culminations. The textural relationships observed indicate that final dome development must be younger than the 30–28 Ma monazite that grew with garnet rims post-regional foliation development, but pre-doming-related deformation. This new timing constraint helps resolve discrepancy between previous interpretations, which have alternately suggested that N–S trending regional folds must be either pre- or post-early Oligocene. Finally, when combined with existing hornblende and white mica cooling ages, these new data indicate that the study area was exhumed rapidly following peak metamorphism. Keywords: Pakistan, Himalaya, Monazite petrochronology, Metamorphism, Phase equilibria modelling, Deformationhttp://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1674987118300689
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kyle P. Larson
Asghar Ali
Sudip Shrestha
Mathieu Soret
John M. Cottle
Rafique Ahmad
spellingShingle Kyle P. Larson
Asghar Ali
Sudip Shrestha
Mathieu Soret
John M. Cottle
Rafique Ahmad
Timing of metamorphism and deformation in the Swat valley, northern Pakistan: Insight into garnet-monazite HREE partitioning
Geoscience Frontiers
author_facet Kyle P. Larson
Asghar Ali
Sudip Shrestha
Mathieu Soret
John M. Cottle
Rafique Ahmad
author_sort Kyle P. Larson
title Timing of metamorphism and deformation in the Swat valley, northern Pakistan: Insight into garnet-monazite HREE partitioning
title_short Timing of metamorphism and deformation in the Swat valley, northern Pakistan: Insight into garnet-monazite HREE partitioning
title_full Timing of metamorphism and deformation in the Swat valley, northern Pakistan: Insight into garnet-monazite HREE partitioning
title_fullStr Timing of metamorphism and deformation in the Swat valley, northern Pakistan: Insight into garnet-monazite HREE partitioning
title_full_unstemmed Timing of metamorphism and deformation in the Swat valley, northern Pakistan: Insight into garnet-monazite HREE partitioning
title_sort timing of metamorphism and deformation in the swat valley, northern pakistan: insight into garnet-monazite hree partitioning
publisher Elsevier
series Geoscience Frontiers
issn 1674-9871
publishDate 2019-05-01
description New metamorphic petrology and geochronology from the Loe Sar dome in the Swat region of northern Pakistan place refined constraints on the pressure, temperature and timing of metamorphism and deformation in that part of the Himalayan orogen. Thermodynamic modelling and monazite petrochronology indicate that metamorphism in the area followed a prograde evolution from ∼525 ± 25 °C and 6 ± 0.5 kbar to ∼610 ± 25 °C and 9 ± 0.5 kbar, between ca. 39 Ma and 28 Ma. Partitioning of heavy rare earth elements between garnet rims and 30–28 Ma monazite are interpreted to indicate coeval crystallization at peak conditions. Microtextural relationships indicate that garnet rim growth post-dated the development of the main foliation in the area. The regional foliation is folded about large-scale N–S trending fold axes and overprinting E–W trending folds to form km-scale domal culminations. The textural relationships observed indicate that final dome development must be younger than the 30–28 Ma monazite that grew with garnet rims post-regional foliation development, but pre-doming-related deformation. This new timing constraint helps resolve discrepancy between previous interpretations, which have alternately suggested that N–S trending regional folds must be either pre- or post-early Oligocene. Finally, when combined with existing hornblende and white mica cooling ages, these new data indicate that the study area was exhumed rapidly following peak metamorphism. Keywords: Pakistan, Himalaya, Monazite petrochronology, Metamorphism, Phase equilibria modelling, Deformation
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1674987118300689
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