Abstract:
Metamorphic rocks have the potential to record in their mineral assemblages, mineral compositional
zoning, and textures, information about geological changes and processes that occur during tectonic
events. Interpretations of metamorphic pressure-temperature (P-T) records have traditionally relied
on results of geothermobarometry studies, but that approach is not suitable in every case.
Metamorphosed greywacke, which makes up ~95% of the New Zealand Southern Alps, has long
proven problematic for traditional geothermobarometry because it develops intractable mineral compositions and/or assemblages, especially at relatively low temperature (greenschist facies)
conditions. An alternative forward modelling approach using the computer program
THERMOCALC was recently used to extract the first detailed P-T history (P-T path) from such
previously intractably difficult "greyschist" rocks from a single site in the New Zealand Southern
Alps. The present study is the first attempt to apply those new methods to rocks from another study
area, and is the first detailed geological study of the Newton Range in the New Zealand Southern
Alps.
The Newton Range is a ~15 km-long, east-west trending range located ~30 km southeast of the
town of Hokitika, ~110 km northeast of the Franz Josef-Fox Glacier region, and immediately to the
east of the Alpine Fault in the Southern Alps, South Island, New Zealand. The rocks in the Newton
Range are mainly derived from Torlesse Terrane accretionary prism greywacke and argillite (Alpine
Schist, greyschist), together with a large pods of ultramafic rock (part of the Pounamu Ultramafic
Belt (PUB)) and minor associated metabasic layers (greenschist), all metamorphosed to greenschist
facies conditions. The dominant mineral assemblage in the greyschist (Qtz + Ms+ Bt ± Chl ± Ep ±
Pl ± Ilm ± Ttn ± Grt ± Zrn ± Tur ± Ap ± Cal), much like that found elsewhere in the Southern Alps.
As elsewhere in the Southern Alps, the dominant high-grade metamorphic mineral assemblages in
the Alpine Schist in the Newton Range are inherited. The mineral assemblages, compositions, and
some textures thus record evidence of processes that took place during tectonic events, presumably
mainly in Cretaceous time, prior to the formation of the modern Southern Alps, which are forming
today by the ongoing oblique continent-continent collision of the Pacific Plate against the Australian
Plate at the Alpine Fault. Compositional zoning in garnet from the greyschist is an important record of the metamorphic P-T path traversed by the host rock as the garnet grew. Occasionally, garnet from the study area contains an inmost core (stage 0) of unusual (anomalously high- or low-MnO) composition. The cores with extremely low MnO are possibly detrital in origin, and those with extremely high MnO may perhaps
have grown in the early tectonic episode that formed the Otago Schist. Typically, garnet shows the
following core- to rim zoning sequence. Stages 1 & 2 show a progressive decrease in MnO and
increase in FeO from core to rim, with higher MnO cores present in rocks with higher whole-rock
MnO compositions. Stage 3 is characterised by a gradual decrease in CaO and signifies the growth
of Ca-bearing oligoclase late in the garnet growth history. Stage 4 is a discontinuous overgrowth
characterised by an abrupt increase in CaO. Such overgrowths have in the past been attributed to
garnet growth accompanying the development of the Alpine Fault mylonite zone in the late
Cenozoic. In the Newton Range they were only observed on garnet adjacent to the main outcrop of
the PUB at ~4.5km from the Alpine Fault, far from the mylonite zone, so local element availability
during decompression (and possibly fluid flow and/or metasomatism) may have played a part in the
growth of these rims.
A P-T path for Alpine Schist from the Newton Range has been estimated using detailed garnet
composition data measured along core-to-rim transects across individual garnets, together with
predicted garnet compositions and P-T pseudosection results calculated using THERMOCALC.
The P-T path starts at ~3.5kbar/400°C, where both garnet and albite coexist, and increases in
pressure and temperature to ~6.5bar/500°C where garnet coexists with both albite and oligoclase.
The estimated peak metamorphic conditions probably correspond to peak metamorphic pressures,
unlike in the Franz Josef-Fox Glacier region where peak conditions (~9.2kbar and 620°C) probably
coincided with peak metamorphic temperatures.