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The Palaeoproterozoic Belomorian (retro)eclogite (Gridino area, Karelia, Russia): further evidence for the earliest cold subduction on Earth and timing of its high pressure granulite facies overprint

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Willner,  A. P.
External Organizations;

Duan,  W.-Y.
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Glodny,  J.       
3.1 Inorganic and Isotope Geochemistry, 3.0 Geochemistry, Departments, GFZ Publication Database, GFZ Helmholtz Centre for Geosciences;

Jöns,  N.
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Schönig,  J.
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Schertl,  H.-P.
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Citation

Willner, A. P., Duan, W.-Y., Glodny, J., Jöns, N., Schönig, J., Schertl, H.-P. (2026): The Palaeoproterozoic Belomorian (retro)eclogite (Gridino area, Karelia, Russia): further evidence for the earliest cold subduction on Earth and timing of its high pressure granulite facies overprint. - Mineralogical Magazine, 90, 1, 114-130.
https://doi.org/10.1180/mgm.2025.10117


Cite as: https://gfzpublic.gfz.de/pubman/item/item_5037161
Abstract
Pseudosection modelling of a relict garnet-core in Palaeoproterozoic rocks from the Gridino area in the southern Belomorian belt of Karelia reveals peak-pressure eclogite-facies conditions of 610–650°C, 18–20 kbar for two retro-eclogite samples and 610–665°C, 23–26 kbar for a rare Mg-rich biotite-orthopyroxene eclogite, suggesting low initial metamorphic field gradients of 6.6–10°C/km. This confirms an earlier finding in Karelia and, considering other Palaeoproterozoic eclogite occurrences worldwide, that ‘cold’ subduction conditions, characteristic of modern-style subduction, occurred during the Palaeoproterozoic, ∼2 Ga ago, for the first time in Earth history. However, compositions of most other phases in the retro-eclogite were reset by diffusion, deformation and recrystallisation during subsequent pressure release and heating to variable degrees, a reason for earlier overestimations of temperatures. By contrast, peak-pressure conditions for a biotite paragneiss (640–740°C, 15–18 kbar) that occurs close to the biotite-orthopyroxene eclogite locality already show an early resetting of its initial assemblage. High-pressure granulite-facies peak-temperature conditions of the retro-eclogite at 712± 5°C, 9–12 kbar (along a field gradient of 20°C/km) were determined by Zr-in-rutile thermometry and quartz-in-garnet elastic barometry. These conditions were dated by a Rb/Sr mineral isochron for the biotite-orthopyroxene eclogite at 1830±20 Ma for the first time. Using existing ages for the peak-pressure conditions, possible slow overall exhumation rates of <0.9 mm/y between eclogite and the granulite-facies stages could be determined that are compatible with erosion as the main exhumation mechanism. The peak-temperature conditions were possibly established by thermal relaxation during early exhumation. However, a younger Rb/Sr mineral isochron for the biotite paragneiss indicates a characteristic Sr-isotopic disequilibrium distribution caused by diffusion during slow cooling between ∼1800 and 1750 Ma during later exhumation.