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Orogeny Can Be Very Short
by
Dewey, John F.
in
Continental shelves
/ Geological folding
/ Geology
/ Granite
/ Highlands
/ Orogens
/ Orogeny
/ Physical Sciences
/ Sediments
/ Subduction
/ Tectonics
2005
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Do you wish to request the book?
Orogeny Can Be Very Short
by
Dewey, John F.
in
Continental shelves
/ Geological folding
/ Geology
/ Granite
/ Highlands
/ Orogens
/ Orogeny
/ Physical Sciences
/ Sediments
/ Subduction
/ Tectonics
2005
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Journal Article
Orogeny Can Be Very Short
2005
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Overview
In contrast to continent/continent collision, arc-continent collision generates very short-lived orogeny because the buoyancy-driven impedance of the subduction of continental lithosphere, accompanied by arc/suprasubduction-zone ophiolite obduction, is relieved by subduction polarity reversal (flip). This tectonic principle is illustrated by the early Ordovician Grampian Orogeny in the British and Irish Caledonides, in which a wealth of detailed sedimentologic, heavy mineral, and geochronologic data pin the Orogeny to a very short Arenig/Llanvirn event. The Orogeny, from the initial subduction of continental margin sediments to the end of postflip shortening, lasted $\\approx18$ million years (my). The collisional shortening, prograde-metamorphic phase of the Orogeny lasted 8 my, extensional collapse and exhumation of midcrustal rocks lasted 1.5 my, and postflip shortening lasted 4.5 my. Strain rates were a typical plate-boundary-zone 10-15. Metamorphism, to the second sillimanite isograd, with extensive partial melting, occurred within a few my after initial collision, indicating that conductive models for metamorphic heat transfer in Barrovian terrains are incorrect and must be replaced by advective models in which large volumes of mafic/ultramafic magma are emplaced, syn-tectonically, below and into evolving nappe stacks. Arc/continent collision generates fast and very short orogeny, regional metamorphism, and exhumation.
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