The role of gravitational body forces in the development of metamorphic core complexes

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Abstract

Within extreme continental extension areas, ductile middle crust is exhumed at the surface as metamorphic core complexes. Sophisticated quantitative models of extreme extension predicted upward transport of ductile middle-lower crust through time. Here we develop a general model for metamorphic core complexes formation and demonstrate that they result from the collapse of a mountain belt supported by a thickened crustal root. We show that gravitational body forces generated by topography and crustal root cause an upward flow pattern of the ductile lower-middle crust, facilitated by a detachment surface evolving into low-angle normal fault. This detachment surface acquires large amounts of finite strain, consistent with thick mylonite zones found in metamorphic core complexes. Isostatic rebound exposes the detachment in a domed upwarp, while the final Moho discontinuity across the extended region relaxes to a flat geometry. This work suggests that belts of metamorphic core complexes are a fossil signature of collapsed highlands.

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Bahadori, A., Holt, W. E., Austermann, J., Campbell, L., Rasbury, E. T., Davis, D. M., … Flesch, L. M. (2022). The role of gravitational body forces in the development of metamorphic core complexes. Nature Communications, 13(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-022-33361-2

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