STRUCTURAL CONTROLS ON MELT TRANSPORT PATHS AND DURATION OF DEFORMATION-INDUCED MELT MIGRATION, FOSDICK MOUNTAINS, ANTARCTICA
The macroscopic structure of the dome, pervasive mesoscopic folds oriented ENE-WSW, and ENE-trending mineral lineation in metatexite indicate a maximum finite strain orientation of 070-250 during dome development, coincident with the stretching direction determined from brittle structures of Cretaceous age throughout the surrounding region. Contemporaneous ESE-striking dextral and less widespread NE-striking sinistral shears with steep fabrics indicate partitioning of regional strain in a transcurrent setting; dome emplacement occurred upon one of these inferred faults. Newly discovered during 2005-06 field study is a wide mylonitic zone recording dextral oblique sense of shear, potentially responsible for exhumation of the gneiss dome. Late structures including refolded folds, leucosome-filled shear bands and interboudin necks record a change in maximum kinematic axis orientation to NNE. U-Pb SHRIMP zircon, monazite and titanite geochronology is underway to assess the duration of migmatization and melt migration through leucosome networks in the dome, by obtaining ages of the U-Pb minerals situated in early vs. late structural sites for leucosome.
Preliminary SHRIMP ages for the narrow growth rims upon 375 Ma magmatic zircons (6 grains) in a migmatized orthogneiss exhibiting early fabrics are 119±2 Ma, interpreted as the time of high temperature metamorphism and melt migration during ENE-WSW transcurrent deformation. The timing coincides with waning plate convergence along the WANT-New Zealand sector of the Cretaceous active margin of Gondwana. The consistency in orientation of contemporaneous brittle to ductile structures suggests a continuum of deformation throughout the upper and lower crust.