Fiordland - New Zealand
Fiordland is located in the
SW of the South Island of New Zealand (see below). Northern Fiordland
exposes the boundary between pristine arc rocks (Median Batholith - green)
and a belt of Paleozoic ortho- and paragneisses
of variable age that represent the metamorphosed paleo-Pacific Gondwana
margin (Western Province - yellow). The region
exposes the lower crustal roots (depths > 45 km) of a doubly thickened
Mesozoic magmatic arc that now forms one of Earth's youngest extensive
high-P granulite facies belts (P = 14 kbar). An Early Cretaceous batholith,
the Western Fiordland Orthogneiss (red), stitches the pristine Mesozoic
arc rocks with rocks of the Gondwana margin.
The structural and metamorphic
evolution of northern Fiordland involved emplacement of the 116-126 Ma
Western Fiordland Orthogneiss batholith (red) at middle to lower crustal
conditions, possibly at the root of an arc of normal thickness (20-25
km). Garnet granulite coronas on enstatite and hornblende, in garnet reaction
zones, indicate that the terrain was buried by approximately 25 km of crust
after emplacement. The two-sided fold-thrust belt at Caswell Sound suggests
that loading was accomplished via the tectonic imbrication of thrust sheets,
possibly during accretion of the arc to the paleo-Pacific margin of Gondwana.
Continued convergence developed high-P pure-shear-dominated shear zones
and ductile thrust faults in the Pembroke Granulite. Pronounced high-P cooling
of the doubly thickened root of the arc occurred prior to unroofing of
the high-P rocks, possibly in response to the tectonic burial and underthrusting
of the relatively cold crust of the Median Batholith. The Anita shear zone
developed at high-P (P = 12 kbar) and initiated the exhumation of the high-P
rocks. Final uplift to the surface is most probably the result of Late
Tertiary motion on the Alpine Fault.
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