CONSTRAINING THE METAMORPHIC AND DEFORMATIONAL HISTORY OF CRYSTALLINE BASEMENT ROCKS, NEEDLE MOUNTAINS, COLORADO
The prior consensus from mineral assemblages alone is that basement rocks in the Needle Mountains were metamorphosed at lower greenschist- to lower amphibolites-facies conditions. In the western Needle Mountains, near Coal Bank Pass, an isolated zone of highly deformed garnet-amphibole-plagioclase gneiss is exposed within the ~1.78 Ga metamorphosed arc-plutonic complex of the Twilight Gneiss. Field observations and detailed petrographic work delineate the extent of this zone, and establish several generations of syn- to post-deformational prograde mineral growth. Growth of all dominant prograde-mineral phases was initiated during deformation, but static thermal growth outlasted deformation. The associations of minerals and fabrics in these rocks are consistent with protracted middle-amphibolite to granulite-facies conditions from a strain- to thermal-dominated state. New microprobe data will be presented to further test this hypothesis and constrain potential P-T-t paths during deformation and metamorphism.