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Is mafic magmatism a heat source for the high temperature metamorphism in southern Finland?




AuthorsM. Väisänen

Conference name32nd Nordic Geological Winter Meeting

PublisherGeological Society of Finland

Publishing placeHelsinki

Publication year2016

JournalBulletin of the Geological Society of Finland

Series titleBulletin of the Geological Society of Finland

VolumeSpecial Volume 1

First page 164

Last page164

Number of pages1

ISSNISSN 0367-5211

Web address http://www.geologinenseura.fi/bulletin/Special_Volume_1_2016/BGSF-NGWM2016_Abstract_Volume.pdf


Abstract

Is mafic magmatism a heat source for the high temperature metamorphism in southern Finland?
M. Väisänen1*
1Department of Geography and Geology, 20014 University of Turku, Finland (*correspondence:
markku.vaisanen@utu.fi)
The bedrock in southern Finland was affected by high temperature/low pressure metamorphism (c. 600-800 °C/4-6 bars) late in the orogeny causing wide-spread crustal melting. Heat source for this is controversial. Previously, mafic intraplating or underplating was suggested as heat sources. Lately, Kukkonen and Lauri (2009) suggested that crustal thickening and radioactive decay of the earlier formed rocks led to crustal melting during the lateorogenic stage. Väisänen et al. (2012) emphasised the role of mafic magmatism in transferring external heat from the mantle to the crust. Stephens and Andersson (2015) proposed that mafic underplating was responsible for the two-stage metamorphism in SE Sweden.

There are quite new evidences, published and unpublished, which show that the crust was intruded by mafic magmas before and during the high-grade metamorphism at 1.85-1.81 Ga. Although the number of the so far discovered mafic intrusions and their areal extent are quite low, they nevertheless inevitably show that mantle-crust interaction took place at the time. It is probable that more of these intrusions will be found in the future. A hypothesis is that mantle-derived mafic magmatism, combined with ubiquitous radioactive decay, incrementally increased the crustal temperatures high enough to cause wide-spread melting and formation of migmatites and granites during the lateorogenic stage. In summary, according to the present model, all the here cited models are in part responsible for the high metamorphic temperatures.

References:
Kukkonen, I.T. and Lauri, L.S. 2009. Precambrian Res. 168, 233–246.
Stephens, M. B. and Andersson, J. 2015. Precambrian Res. 264, 235-257.
Väisänen, M., Eklund, O., Lahaye, Y., O’Brien, H., Fröjdö, S., Högdahl, K. and Lammi, M. 2012. GFF 134, 99–114.



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