SEISMIC AND TECTONO-METAMORPHIC CHARACTER OF THE
LOWER CONTINENTAL CRUST IN PHANEROZOIC AREAS:A CONSEQUENCE OF POST-THICKENING
EXTENSION
P.F REY
Laboratoire des Sciences de la Terre, ENS Lyon, 69364 LYON Cedex 07
and Centre Geologique et Geophysique, USTL, 34095 Montpellier Cedex 05,
France
in: TECTONICS (1993), Vol.12, 2, pp. 580-590.
ABSTRACT
Deep seismic profiles of Phanerozoic continental crust commonly show a
highly reflective lower crust. Rheological considerations suggest that
the seismic fabric of the lower crust can be attributed to the tectonic
transposition of various petrological heterogeneities in the main flow
plane. The Variscan provinces of western Europe have been affected, during
Phanerozoic times, by several extensional and compressional events. The
geometrical relationships between seismic and geological structures indicate
that the layering of the lower crust was acquired during the Late Carboniferous
to Permian when the thickened Variscan crust was affected by gravitational
collapse. Petrological and geochronological analyses of deep crustal rocks
(xenoliths and exposed sections) indicate that the lower crust has recorded
a major high-T / medium-P granulite facies metamorphism during the late
Variscan extension, whereas on the surface Upper Carboniferous to Permian
basins were being deposited. A similar scenario characterizes other Phanerozoic
orogenic belts. In the Caledonian provinces of the British Islands, the
lower crust is seismically reflective; it has undergone medium-P granulitic
metamorphism during the deposition of Devonian sedimentary basins, at the
end of the Caledonian orogeny. In the same way, collapse of the Mesozoic
belt in the western part of North America is responsible, during the Cenozoic,
for pervasive crustal extension whose consequence is a seismic layering
of the lower crust accompanied by a low-P granulite grade metamorphic event,
while in the mid- and upper crusts, low-angle, ductile, normal faults give
rise to the Basin and Range Province. Therefore, it is proposed that there
is a genetic relationship between (1) post-thickening crustal extension,
(2) low- to medium-P granulite facies metamorphism of the lower crust and
(3) seismic layering of the lower crust.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
Thanks are due to G. MÚnard, A. Paul, D. Fountain and J. M. Caron,
for very stimulating discussions. Special thanks are due to J. P. Burg,
C. Teyssier, J. Van Den Driessche, and B.Tikoff for useful reviews, comments,
and English improvement. K. D. Nelson and G. Ranalli made helpful suggestions
on the manuscript submitted to the journal. This work has been supported
by the INSU-CNRS (ATP-ECORS 891705).
here
to return to my Home Page.