Publication Date:
2015
abstract:
The metamorphic architecture of eastern Nepalese Himalaya is characterized by a welldocumented
inverted metamorphic field gradient, with metamorphic grade increasing northward
from lower (LHS) to higher (HHC) structural levels across the north-dipping Main Central
Thrust Zone (MCTZ). Peak metamorphic conditions experienced by units at different
structural levels have been investigated extensively, but their P-T-(t) evolution could be constrained
better.
A synthesis of our recent petrological studies in eastern Nepal is based on selected geotraverses
across the Dudh-Kosi, Arun, and Tamur tectonic windows, where the LHS is exposed beneath
MCTZ and HHC. To define the entire P-T evolution experienced by lithotectonic units, detailed
petrological investigations were focused on metapelites. P-T trajectories were constrained combining
microstructural observations and isochemical phase diagrams modelling. The uniformity
of the approach applied is a robust method to quantitatively compare the resulting P-T paths.
These P-T paths are compared with the petrological constraints inferred from the 'Channel
Flow' model, one of the most popular paradigms to explain the tectonometamorphic evolution
and the first-order geological features of the Himalaya. The overall geometries of our P-T paths
match the results of the numerical model, suggesting that 'Channel Flow' is compatible, from a
petrological viewpoint, as the main process operating during the exhumation of eastern Himalaya.
Iris type:
02.01 Contributo in volume (Capitolo o Saggio)
Keywords:
Himalaya; channel flow; metamorphism
List of contributors: