Materials Map

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The Materials Map is an open tool for improving networking and interdisciplinary exchange within materials research. It enables cross-database search for cooperation and network partners and discovering of the research landscape.

The dashboard provides detailed information about the selected scientist, e.g. publications. The dashboard can be filtered and shows the relationship to co-authors in different diagrams. In addition, a link is provided to find contact information.

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The Open University

in Cooperation with on an Cooperation-Score of 37%

Topics

Publications (2/2 displayed)

  • 2024Allanite U–Pb dating places new constraints on the high‐pressure to high‐temperature evolution of the deep Himalayan crustcitations
  • 2018Replacement reactions and deformation by dissolution and precipitation processes in amphibolites71citations

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Wood, Eleni
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Bidgood, Anna
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Halton, Alison
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Hammond, Samantha J.
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Argles, Thomas
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Kunz, Barbara E.
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Menegon, Luca
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2018

Co-Authors (by relevance)

  • Wood, Eleni
  • Bidgood, Anna
  • Halton, Alison
  • Roberts, Nick M. W.
  • Millar, Ian L.
  • Hammond, Samantha J.
  • Argles, Thomas
  • Kunz, Barbara E.
  • Menegon, Luca
  • Giuntoli, Francesco
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article

Allanite U–Pb dating places new constraints on the high‐pressure to high‐temperature evolution of the deep Himalayan crust

  • Wood, Eleni
  • Bidgood, Anna
  • Halton, Alison
  • Roberts, Nick M. W.
  • Millar, Ian L.
  • Hammond, Samantha J.
  • Warren, Clare J.
  • Argles, Thomas
  • Kunz, Barbara E.
Abstract

During continental collision, crustal rocks are buried, deformed, transformed and exhumed. The rates, timescales and tectonic implications of these processes are constrained through the sequence and conditions of metamorphic reactions in major and accessory phases. Petrographic, isotopic and elemental data from metabasite samples in NW Bhutan, eastern Himalaya, suggest initial equilibration under high‐pressure (plagioclase‐absent and rutile‐present) conditions, followed by decompression to lower pressure conditions at high‐temperatures that stabilized plagioclase, orthopyroxene and ilmenite. Field observations and chemical indicators suggest equilibration under the lower pressure conditions is likely linked to the infiltration of melt from the host metasedimentary rocks. The metabasites preserve two metamorphic growth stages of chemically‐and petrographically distinct allanite that temporally overlap two stages of zircon growth. Allanite cores and zircon mantles grew at c. 19 ± 2 and 17–15.5 Ma respectively, linked texturally and chemically to the high‐pressure evolution. Symplectitic rims on embayed allanite cores, wholly symplectized Aln–Ilm and Aln–Cpx grains, and high U zircon rims grew at c. 15.5–14.5 Ma, linked chemically to the presence of melt and lower pressure, high‐temperature conditions. A single garnet Lu–Hf date is interpreted as geologically meaningless, with the bulk rock composition modified by melt infiltration after garnet formation. The open system evolution of these rocks precludes precise determination of the reactive bulk composition during metamorphic evolution and thus absolute conditions, especially during the early high‐pressure evolution. Despite these limitations, we show that combined geochemical and petrographic datasets are still able to provide insights into the rates and timescales of deep orogenic processes. The data suggest a younger and shallower evolution for the NW Bhutan metabasites compared to similar rocks in the central and eastern Himalayas.

Topics
  • impedance spectroscopy
  • grain
  • melt
  • reactive