DOI: 10.3390/geosciences15020060 ISSN: 2076-3263

How Stiff Was Armorica During the Variscan Orogeny? A Reappraisal of the “Bretonian” Phase in Central Brittany

Michel Faure, Eric Marcoux, Marc Poujol, Clément Masson

In collision belts, the upper plate is generally less deformed than the lower one that underwent syn-metamorphic ductile shearing, and frequently late-collisional crustal melting. Concerning the Variscan orogeny, it is widely accepted that the Armorica microcontinent represented the upper plate of the collision system. In France, the Central-North-Armorican Domain belonged to this upper plate whose southern margin in the Pontivy–Coray area exposes metamorphic rocks. There, structural and metamorphic studies indicate that an early tectono-metamorphic event (M0-M1) with biotite–garnet–staurolite–kyanite assemblage, crystallized at 0.9 GPa and 500 °C, is characterized by a top-to-the NW shearing. This event was followed by an HT event (M2) at ca 800–900 °C, coeval with a domal structure. In micaschists, monazite yields an LA-ICP-MS age at 351 Ma ascribed to M2. M0-M1-M2 events developed before the Late Carboniferous pluton emplacement at ca 315 Ma (M3 event). The tectono-metamorphic succession documents that Armorica was not a rigid block but underwent a synmetamortphic ductile deformation during the Famennian–Tournaisian (360–355 Ma) collision redefined here as the late episode of the “Bretonian orogenic phase”, whereas the pre-Famennian Bretonnian episode is ascribed to oceanic subduction. These new data allow us to reassess the geodynamic evolution of this part of the Variscan orogen.

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