2 resultados para Elgin marbles
em ArchiMeD - Elektronische Publikationen der Universität Mainz - Alemanha
Resumo:
Das Attisch-Kykladische Massiv ist Teil der Helleniden, einem Gebirgszug im östlichen Mittelmeerraum zwischen Alpen und Himalaya. Seit dem späten Mesozoikum unterlag diese Region dem Einfluß der alpidischen Orogenphasen. Die vorliegende Arbeit befasst sich mit den präalpidischen Grundgebirgseinheiten der Kykladen, die durch grünschieferfaziell überprägte Gneise und Marmore repräsentiert werden. Diese wurden geochemisch und isotopisch analysiert. Geochemisch stellen sie granitische und granodioritische Orthogneise subalkalinen, peraluminösen Charakters dar. Ihre Haupt- und Spurenelementsignaturen deuten auf die Existenz separater Schmelzen ähnlicher krustaler Zusammensetzung hin. Dies reflektiert auch die Rb/Sr- und Sm/Nd-Isotopie mit Errorchronenaltern von ca. 310 Ma. Die 87Sr/86Sri-Zusammensetzung besitzt einen rel. niedrigen Mittelwert von 0.7072±0.0019. Das 143Nd/144Ndi-Verhältnis von 0.51187±0.00011 korrespondiert mit leicht erhöhten eNd-Werten zwischen -8 und –7, was auf komplex zusammengesetzte Ausgangsschmelzen deutet (Hybridtyp "Hs" ). Zirkonanalysen liefern magmatische Intrusionsalter von 300 Ma, ererbte Körner bis zu 2305±1 Ma, was die Beteiligung alter Kontinentalkruste belegt. Das Tectonic Setting befindet sich im aktiven Kontinentalrand und wird als VAG klassifiziert. Ausgewählte Marmore von Naxos weisen ein relativ niedriges 87Sr/86Sr-Verhältnis von 0.707295±0.000012 auf, das mit dem des Meerwassers während des Mittleren Juras übereinstimmt und mit dem Pb/Pb-Isochronenalter von 172±17 Ma korreliert
Resumo:
In this PhD thesis, a multidisciplinary study has been carried out on metagranitoids and paragneisses from the Eastern Rhodope Massif, northern Greece, to decipher the pre-Alpine magmatic and geodynamic evolution of the Rhodope Massif and to correlate the eastern part with the western/central parts of the orogen. The Rhodope Massif, which occupies the major part of NE Greece and S Bulgaria, represents the easternmost part of the Internal Hellenides. It is regarded as a nappe stack of high-grade units, which is classically subdivided into an upper unit and a lower unit, separated by a SSE-NNW trending thrust plane, the Nestos thrust. Recent research in the central Greek Rhodope Massif revealed that the two units correspond to two distinct terranes of different age, the Permo-Carboniferous Thracia Terrane, which was overthrusted by the Late Jurassic/Early Cretaceous Rhodope Terrane. These terranes are separated by the Nestos suture, a composite zone comprising metapelites, metabasites, metagranitoids and marbles, which record high-pressure and even ultrahigh-pressure metamorphism in places. Similar characteristic rock associations were investigated during this study along several well-constrained cross sections in vincity to the Ada, Sidiro and Kimi villages in the Greek Eastern Rhodope Massif. Field evidence revealed that the contact zone of the two terranes in the Eastern Rhodope Massif is characterized by a mélange of metapelites, migmatitic amphibolites/eclogites, strongly sheared orthogneisses and marbles. The systematical occurrence of this characteristic rock association between the terranes implies that the Nestos suture is a continuous belt throughout the Greek Rhodope Massif. In this study, a new UHP locality could be established and for the first time in the Greek Rhodope, metamorphic microdiamonds were identified in situ in their host zircons using Laser-Raman spectroscopy. The presence of the diamonds as well as element distribution patterns of the zircons, obtained by TOF-SIMS, indicate metamorphic conditions of T > 1000 °C and P > 4 GPa. The high-pressure and ultrahigh-pressure rocks of the mélange zone are considered to have formed during the subduction of the Nestos Ocean in Jurassic times at ~150 Ma. Melting of metapelitic rocks at UHP conditions facilitated the exhumation to lower crustal levels. To identify major crust forming events, basement granitoids were dated by LA-SF-ICPMS and SHRIMP-II U-Pb analyses of zircons. The geochronological results revealed that the Eastern Rhodope Massif consists of two crustal units, a structurally lower Permo-Carboniferous unit corresponding to the Thracia Terrane and a structurally upper Late Jurassic/Early Cretaceous unit corresponding to the Rhodope Terrane, like it was documented for the Central Rhodope Massif. Inherited zircons in the orthogneisses from the Thracia Terrane of the Eastern Rhodope Massif indicate the presence of a pre-existing Neoproterozoic and Ordovician-Silurian basement in this region. Triassic magmatism is witnessed by the zircons of few orthogneisses from the easternmost Rhodope Massif and is interpreted to be related to rifting processes. Whole-rock major and trace element analyses indicate that the metagranitoids from both terranes originated in a subduction-related magmatic-arc environment. The Sr-Nd isotope data for both terranes of the Eastern and Central Rhodope Massif suggest a mixed crust-mantle source with variable contributions of older crustal material as already indicated by the presence of inherited zircons. Geochemical and isotopic similarity of the basement of the Thracia Terrane and the Pelagonian Zone implies that the Thracia Terrane is a fragment of a formerly unique Permo-Carboniferous basement, separated by rifting and opening of the Meliata-Maliac ocean system in Triassic times. A branch of the Meliata-Maliac ocean system, the Nestos Ocean, subducted northwards in Late Jurassic times leading to the formation of the Late Jurassic/Early Cretaceous Rhodope magmatic arc on remnants of the Thracia Terrane as suggested by inherited Permo-Carboniferous zircons. The ~150 Ma zircon ages of the orthogneisses from the Rhodope Terrane indicate that subduction-related magmatism and HP/UHP metamorphism occurred during the same subduction phase. Subduction ceased due to the closure of the Nestos Ocean in the Late Jurassic/Early Cretaceous. The post-Jurassic evolution of the Rhodope Massif is characterized by the exhumation of the Rhodope core complex in the course of extensional tectonics associated with late granite intrusions in Eocene to Miocene times.