EGU2020-12395, updated on 12 Jun 2020
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu2020-12395
EGU General Assembly 2020
© Author(s) 2020. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

Metamorphic evolution of Raspas complex (Ecuador) and its relation with a J-K belt of melanges in NW of the South American plate.

Mayda Arrieta-Prieto1, Carlos Zuluaga-Castrillón1, Oscar Castellanos-Alarcón2, and Carlos Ríos-Reyes3
Mayda Arrieta-Prieto et al.
  • 1Universidad Nacional de Colombia, School of Sciences, Department of Geosciences, Bogotá, Colombia (macarrietapr@unal.edu.co)
  • 2Universidad de Pamplona, School of Basic Sciences, Department of Geology, Pamplona, Colombia (osmcastellanosal@unal.edu.co)
  • 3Universidad Industrial de Santander, School of Physico-chemical engineering, Department of Geology (carios@uis.edu.co)

High-pressure complexes along the Earth's surface provide evidence of the processes involved in both the crystallization of rocks in the subduction channel and its exhumation. Such processes are key to understand the dynamics and evolution of subduction zones and to try to reconstruct P-T trajectories for these complexes.

Previous studies on the Raspas complex (southern Ecuador) agree to state that it is composed of metamorphic rocks, mainly blueschists and eclogites, containing the mineral assemblage: glaucophane + garnet + epidote + omphacite + white mica + rutile ± quartz ± apatite ± pyrite ± calcite; which stabilized in metamorphic conditions of high pressure and low temperature. Additionally, the Raspas Complex has been genetically related to accretion and subduction processes of seamounts, which occurred in South America during the Late Jurassic - Early Cretaceous interval; and the exhumation of the complex was related to subduction channels. However, the evidence presented in the existing literature makes little emphasis on the reconstruction of thermobarometric models for the rocks of this complex.

By combining petrographic observations, whole-rock chemistry, and mineral chemistry in this work; it was possible to determine that pressure values of 10 ± 3 Kbar and temperature values of 630 ± 30 ° C, (obtained by simulations with THERMOCALC®) correspond to an event of retrograde metamorphism, suffered by the complex during its exhumation. This theory is complemented by the specific textures (that suggest this retrograde process) observed during petrographic analysis, such as amphibole replacing pyroxene, garnet chloritization, plagioclase crystallization and rutile replacement by titanite.

The results obtained, together with the thermobarometry data published for the Arquía complex in Colombia, allow us to establish a P-T trajectory, that may suggest a genetic relationship between these two complexes as a result of the tectonic processes associated with an active subduction margin that affected the NW margin of the South American plate at the end of the Jurassic.

 

How to cite: Arrieta-Prieto, M., Zuluaga-Castrillón, C., Castellanos-Alarcón, O., and Ríos-Reyes, C.: Metamorphic evolution of Raspas complex (Ecuador) and its relation with a J-K belt of melanges in NW of the South American plate., EGU General Assembly 2020, Online, 4–8 May 2020, EGU2020-12395, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu2020-12395, 2020

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