EGU21-5897
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-5897
EGU General Assembly 2021
© Author(s) 2021. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

Accretion-controlled forearc deformation pulses recorded by high-pressure paleo-accretionary wedges: the example of the Hellenic subduction zone

Armel Menant1, Onno Oncken1, Johannes Glodny1, Samuel Angiboust2, Laurent Jolivet3, Romain Augier4, Eloïse Bessière3, and Taras Gerya5
Armel Menant et al.
  • 1GFZ Helmholtz Centre Potsdam, German Research Centre for Geosciences, Potsdam, Germany (armel.menant@gfz-potsdam.de)
  • 2CNRS, Institut de physique du globe de Paris, Université de Paris, Paris, France
  • 3Sorbonne Université, UMR 7193 CNRS-UPMC, Institut des Sciences de la Terre de Paris, Paris, France
  • 4Université d’Orléans, ISTO, UMR 7327, Orléans, France
  • 5Institute of Geophysics, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology (ETH), Zürich, Switzerland

Subduction margins are the loci of a wide range of deformation processes occurring at different timescales along the plate interface and in the overriding forearc crust. Whereas long-term deformation is usually considered as stable over Myr-long periods, this vision is challenged by an increasing number of observations suggesting a long-term pulsing evolution of active margins. To appraise this emerging view of a highly dynamic subduction system and identify the driving mechanisms, detailed studies on high pressure-low temperature (HP-LT) exhumed accretionary complexes are crucial as they open a window on the deformation history affecting the whole forearc region.

In this study, we combine structural and petrological observations, Raman spectroscopy on carbonaceous material, Rb/Sr multi-mineral geochronology and thermo-mechanical numerical models to unravel with an unprecedented resolution the tectono-metamorphic evolution of the Late-Cenozoic HP-LT nappe stack cropping out in western Crete (Hellenic subduction zone). A consistent decrease of peak temperatures and deformation ages toward the base of the nappe pile allows us to identify a minimum of three basal accretion episodes between ca. 24 Ma and ca. 15 Ma. On the basis of structural evidences and pressure-temperature-time-strain predictions from numerical modeling, we argue that each of these mass-flux events triggered a pulse in the strain rate, sometimes associated with a switch of the stress regime (i.e., compressional/extensional). Such accretion-controlled transient deformation episodes last at most ca. 1-2 Myr and may explain the poly-phased structural records of exhumed rocks without involving changes in far-field stress conditions. This long-term background tectonic signal controlled by deep accretionary processes plays a part in active deformations monitored at subduction margins, though it may remain blind to most of geodetic methods because of superimposed shorter-timescale transients, such as seismic-cycle-related events.

How to cite: Menant, A., Oncken, O., Glodny, J., Angiboust, S., Jolivet, L., Augier, R., Bessière, E., and Gerya, T.: Accretion-controlled forearc deformation pulses recorded by high-pressure paleo-accretionary wedges: the example of the Hellenic subduction zone, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-5897, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-5897, 2021.

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