A new indicator of movement direction during orogenesis: measurement technique and application to the Alps |
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Authors: | T.H. Bell A. Forde J. Wang |
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Affiliation: | Department of Earth Sciences, James Cook University, Townsville, Qld 4811, Australia |
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Abstract: | The orientation of axes of sigmoidal, staircase or spiral inclusion trails within porphyroblasts provides an indicator of the direction of movement during deformation that is synchronous with metamorphism. A simple technique is presented in detail to find this axis in 3D by radially sectioning a horizontal slab cut from an oriented sample. When viewed from one direction, the switch in asymmetry of the porphyroblast inclusion trails in these sections defines the trend of the axis. Further radial sectioning of a vertical slab cut parallel to this trend determines the plunge of this axis. This technique is independent of the model adopted for the formation of sigmoidal or spiral-shaped inclusion trails and can be used to evaluate the mechanism by which they form. It can also be used to evaluate theories of folding and orogenesis. Measurements of spiral and sigmoid axes in garnet porphyroblasts from the European Alps show that they reflect the movement of the African Plate relative to Europe better than linear indicators preserved within the same rocks. |
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