Geochronology, geochemistry, and geological evolution of the Troiseck-Floning and Rosskogel nappes (Eastern Alps): unraveling parallels between the Eastern Alps and Western Carpathians

The Troiseck-Floning and Rosskogel nappes are part of the Austroalpine Unit in the eastern part of the Eastern Alps. The nappes are in tectonic contact and comprise Permian to Mesozoic lower greenschist facies metamorphic meta-sediments, but only the Troiseck-Floning Nappe consists of a pre-Permian crystalline basement (Troiseck Complex) as well. LA-ICP-MS U–Pb zircon ages, Rb–Sr biotite ages and geochemical data unravel the geological evolution of these tectonic units from Neoproterozoic to Mesozoic times. Detrital U–Pb zircon analyses from siliciclastic meta-sediments of the Troiseck Complex indicate a late Ediacaran to early Cambrian deposition age of the volcanoclastic sequence. The age distribution correlates with a position along the northeastern Gondwana margin. A late Cambrian crystallization age (502.4 ± 6.8 Ma) of granitic intrusions together with evidence for Late Cambrian/Ordovician mag-matism and metamorphism indicate a position at an active plate margin. Polyphase overprinting during the Variscan orogeny is recorded by Late Devonian/early Carboniferous pegmatite dikes (~ 353 Ma) that formed after an early Variscan event, while Pennsylvanian ages of overgrowth rims and inherited grains (~ 320 Ma) are evidence for late Variscan metamorphism. Rhyolitic to andesitic volcanic rocks from the Troiseck-Floning and Rosskogel nappes (271–264 Ma) concomitant with intrusions of porphyric granitoids now transformed to augen gneiss (271 Ma) yield evidence for Permian rift-related magmatism that is widely reported from the Eastern Alps and Western Carpathi-ans. Rb–Sr biotite ages (75–74 Ma) indicate Late Cretaceous cooling below c. 300 °C. This relates to Late Cretaceous exhumation of the Troiseck-Floning Nappe following an Eo-Alpine metamorphic overprint at lower greenschist-facies metamorphic conditions. Based on the similar lithostratigraphy, analogous geological evolution and structure, the Troiseck-Floning Nappe represents the lateral extension of the Seckau Nappe. The new dataset also allows for correlations with other basement complexes that occur in the Western Carpathians.


Introduction
The easternmost part of the Alpine orogen presents itself as an intricate arrangement of various pre-Alpine basement complexes and their respective Mesozoic cover sequences (Fig. 1).This juxtaposition of different crustal levels is the result of nappe stacking, exhumation and brittle deformation during the Alpine orogeny.Based on their Alpine overprint and palaeogeographic context, the tectonic interpretation of Schmid et al. (2004) and Froitzheim et al. (2008) subdivide the basement exposures into nappes and nappe systems of Upper and Lower Austroalpine affiliation.Unraveling the evolution of each of these basement complexes by their magmatic inventory and their structural and metamorphic overprints is essential for palaeogeographic reconstructions and correlations of the individual tectonic elements of the Alpine nappe stack.
Recently, new geochronological and geochemical data from the central and eastern parts of the Silvretta-Seckau Nappe System have shed new light on the magmatic and metamorphic history of the region.These data have been obtained from various complexes, including Fig. 1 Tectonic map of the Eastern Alps and Western Carpathians using the subdivision of Froitzheim et al. (2008).Additionally, the paleogeographic origin and a correlation of the ALCAPA-derived units is indicated.Abbreviation "N.S. " in the legend stands for Nappe System.The red square refers to the area visualized in Fig. 2 the Golling-and Riesach Complex (Weißpriach, Duisitz and Obertal nappes; Huang et al., 2021;2022), Seckau Complex (Seckau Nappe; Pfingstl et al., 2015;Mandl et al., 2018;2022), and Waldbach Complex (Vorau Nappe; Chang et al., 2021).Nevertheless, there is still a significant data gap in the eastern part of the Silvretta-Seckau Nappe System concerning the Troiseck-Floning Nappe.The latter presumably represents the eastern continuation of the Seckau Nappe, separated by sinistral displacement along the Trofaiach Fault.However, the pre-Miocene relationship between the pre-Alpine basement complexes remains unclear due to a lack of protolith ages and an enigmatic pre-Alpine geological evolution of the Troiseck Complex.
This paper presents new geochronological and geochemical analyses of the Troiseck Complex, aiming to unravel its geological evolution, also in the context of neighboring units of the Silvretta-Seckau Nappe System.There is a general agreement on the correlation of the Eastern Alps and the Western Carpathians below the Vienna basin (e.g.Plašienka, 2018) and recent correlations focused on structural data (Tari et al., 2021) and the Cretaceous sedimentary cover of basement units (Hók et al., 2022).This study presents new data, which foster the correlation between the basement complexes.Altogether, the data presented contribute to the broader understanding of the Alpine-Carpathians orogen and its geological history.

Geological setting
The study focuses on the Troiseck-Floning Nappe of the Silvretta-Seckau Nappe System, representing the lowermost Upper Austroalpine tectonic unit in the Eastern Alps.Additionally, two samples from the directly underlying Rosskogel Nappe, traditionally attributed to the Lower Austroalpine unit were analyzed (Figs. 1, 2).

Troiseck-Floning Nappe
The Upper Austroalpine Troiseck-Floning Nappe extends about 70 km in WSW-ENE direction in northeastern Styria (Austria), from the area of Trofaiach in the West to Mürzzuschlag in the East.A pre-Variscan basement (the so-called Troiseck Complex; Schuster & Nowotny, 2016) and its Permian to Triassic cover sequence constitute the Troiseck-Floning Nappe (Fig. 3).The crystalline basement is composed of siliciclastic metasediments (paragneiss and micaschist), metabasites (amphibolite) and subordinate carbonatic layers (impure marble).The Troiseck Complex is permeated by lenses of deformed granitic igneous rocks and unconformably overlain by rhyolitic metavolcanics that constitute the base of Permian to Mesozoic sediments.The latter include Permian clastic sediments, Lower Triassic quartzite (Semmering quartzite) and Lower to Middle Triassic calcite marble, dolomite and rauhwacke (Spengler, 1921;Cornelius, 1936;Kristan-Tollmann & Tollmann, 1967).To the NE, the thickness of the nappe is greatly reduced and while the cover sequence extends continuously to Gloggnitz, the basement rocks are phyllonitized and appear only discontinuously in a klippe at Mahdtalkogel and at Tratenkogel (Tollmann, 1977).
So far, no metamorphic peak conditions have been determined for the Troiseck Complex, but Late Devonian ages constrain cooling from amphibolite-facies metamorphic conditions (Handler, 1994;Schmidt, 1999).Ar-Ar muscovite ages indicate mid-Carboniferous cooling (Dallmeyer et al., 1998).Permian ages of 284 Ma (Handler, 1994) and 255 Ma (Schmidt, 1999) from Rb-Sr analyses on magmatic white mica presumably represent Eo-Alpine rejuvenation of Variscan ages (Schuster et al., 2001).The Veitsch-and Silbersberg nappes of the Veitsch-Silbersberg Nappe System (Neubauer et al., 1994;Schuster, 2016) are located in a hanging wall position on the northern side of the Troiseck-Floning Nappe.They were overthrust in the course of the Eo-Alpine orogeny, leading to a retrogressive overprint of lower greenschistfacies metamorphic conditions in the footwall (Handler, 1994;Dallmeyer et al., 1998;Schmidt, 1999).The thermal peak at the base of the overlying Veitsch Nappe is constrained by Raman spectroscopy on carbonaceous material (416 ± 23 °C; Rantitsch et al., 2020).
Towards the south the Troiseck-Floning Nappe is underlain by the Lower Austroalpine Unit, i.e. the Rosskogel Nappe, with a north-dipping tectonic contact that experienced ductile deformation under greenschistfacies metamorphic conditions in Late Cretaceous times (Dallmeyer et al., 1998;Schuster et al., 2001).
Miocene faults truncate this nappe pile, in particular the Mur-Mürz fault system in the East and the Trofaiach Fault in the Southwest (Fig. 2).The Trofaiach Fault is an east-west trending sinistral strike-slip fault (Nievoll, 1985) that constitutes the boundary between the Troiseck-Floning Nappe and the Seckau Nappe.The latter comprises the Seckau-, Amering-, and Speik Complexes (cf.Becker, 1980;Pfingstl et al., 2015;Mandl et al., 2018;2022) which at least partly represent the lateral continuation of the Troiseck Complex.

Rosskogel Nappe
Permian silicic and intermediate metavolcanic rocks (also referred to as "Rosskogel Porphyroid" and "Biotite-Uralite-Schist", respectively) and Permian to Mesozoic metasediments are the main constituents of the Rosskogel Nappe (Cornelius, 1952;Gaal, 1965;Tollmann, 1977).The biotite-uralite-schists are exclusively occurring in the Rosskogel Nappe and in the (inverted) Lower Austroalpine Permian to Mesozoic rocks that appear in the footwall of the Troiseck Complex southwest of the proper Rosskogel Nappe.The rocks of the Rosskogel Nappe experienced strong internal ductile deformation and folding, which precludes the assignment of stratigraphic ages.Based on the metamorphic overprint of post-Variscan sequences, Gaal (1965) postulated a prograde Alpine overprint for the Rosskogel Nappe.

Analytical techniques
In the course of detailed mapping for the GK50 map sheets 102 Aflenz (Bryda et al., 2020) and 103 Kindberg, we took samples from main lithologies (metasedimentary and igneous rocks) of the Troiseck-Floning and Rosskogel nappes.Coordinates of sample locations are provided in Table 1.Thin sections (Fig. 3) were prepared and analyzed using an optical microscope.Sample preparation included crushing, sieving and standard mineral separation for zircon and biotite.We selected six samples from the Troiseck-Floning Nappe and two samples from   1) metavolcanic rocks of the Rosskogel Nappe for U-Pb dating of zircon.Additionally, biotite from three samples was separated for Rb/Sr geochronology.

Whole-rock geochemistry
A representative aliquot of each sample, milled to a homogenous powder was shipped to Activation Laboratories Ltd facilities in Ontario/Canada where major and trace element analyses were carried out following the analytical procedure termed 'Code 4LITHO' .Major element composition and Sc, Be, V, Ba, Sr, Y and, Zr contents were analyzed using fusion inductively coupled plasma-optical emission spectroscopy (ICP-OES), while fusion ICP-mass spectrometry (ICP-MS) was used for all other trace-elements.Calibration was performed during the analysis using one of 14 prepared USGS and CAN-MET certified reference materials for every group of ten samples.Three blanks and five controls (three before the sample group and two after) were analyzed per group of samples.Duplicates were fused and analyzed every 15 samples, and the instrument was recalibrated after every 40 analyses.

Zircon U-Pb geochronology
Zircons for U-Pb age dating were separated using standard techniques.For LA-MC-ICP-MS analysis, handpicked zircons were embedded in epoxy resin, grinded and polished to half of their thickness.Combined backscattered electron (BSE) and cathodoluminescence (CL) images were taken from all zircons to document their internal structure.
U-Pb dates were obtained using a MC-ICP-MS Nu Plasma II from Nu Instruments coupled to a 193 nm excimer laser from ESI/New Wave Research.Measurement conditions are presented in Additional file 1: Table S1.Spot analyses were conducted with 25 µm spot size, 5 Hz repetition rate and a sample fluence of ~ 2.7-2.8J/cm 2 .The laser was warmed up before each measurement by shooting 25 s at the shutter, which was followed by 15 s of sample ablation.The ablation aerosol was transported by a He gas flow (0.73-0.75 l/min) and mixed with Ar make-up gas (0.75 l/min) in a mixing bulb before introduction into the torch.A mixed Faraday-multiple ion counting array was used for detecting the ions.Data reduction was performed with the IOLITE v. 3.71 software package using the X_U-Pb_Geochron4 DRS (Paton  (Vermeesch, 2018).The weighted mean age plots show uncertainties at 2σ level.Additionally, an external uncertainty was propagated and added quadratically to the uncertainty of the weighted mean ages.The approximate amount of the external uncertainty was estimated from the long-term excess variance of the secondary standards (~ 1.3%).The full dataset including analyses on reference zircons is provided in Additional file 2: Table S2.

Biotite Rb-Sr geochronology
Biotite was separated from sieve fraction 0.2-0.3mm using a vibration table, grinding in alcohol and magnetic splitting.The weights of the samples used for dissolution were about 100 mg for whole-rock powder and ∼200 mg for biotite.Chemical preparation was performed at the Geological Survey of Austria in Vienna.The chemical sample preparation follows the procedure described by Sölva et al. (2005).Isotope measurements were carried out at the Department of Lithospheric Research at the University of Vienna.Rb and Sr concentrations were determined by isotope dilution using mixed Rb-Sr spikes.Spiked Rb ratios were measured from Ta single filaments, whereas spiked Sr ratios were analyzed from Re double filaments with a ThermoFinnigan ® Triton TI TIMS.Total procedural blanks are < 1 ng for Rb and Sr.During the periods of measurements the NBS987 standard yielded 87 Sr/ 86 Sr = 0.710248 ± 4 (n = 17; 2σ standard deviation).Isochron ages were calculated with the software IsoplotR (Vermeesch, 2018) assuming an error of 1% on the 87 Rb/ 86 Sr ratio.

Petrography and geochemical characteristics
Thin section photographs are provided in Fig. 4. Results of major, trace and rare earth element (REE) analyses are provided in Additional File 3: Table S3.Plots of geochemical analyses (Figs. 5,6 and 7) were generated with the software GeoChemical Data toolkit v6.0 (GCDkit; Janoušek et al., 2006).

Metabasites
Amphibolite bodies with transitions into hornblendegneiss, intercalate with the metasediments of the Troiseck Complex.Generally, it is possible to distinguish two main types of amphibolite: banded plagioclase-rich amphibolite and characteristic garnet-amphibolite.Both types are mostly fine-grained with a layered structure subparallel to the main foliation.Locally, the rocks exhibit intense ductile deformation with rootless isoclinal folds and a pronounced hornblende mineral lineation.Thin (cm-thick) veins and patches of anatectic melt associated with coarsegrained hornblende presumably indicate initial stages of anataxis in structurally lower parts of the Troiseck Complex.Main minerals are amphibole, plagioclase, quartz, clinozoisite, epidote, biotite, chlorite, calcite and garnet.Apatite, zircon, ilmenite, titanite and rutile occur as accessory minerals.Hypidiomorphic to idiomorphic amphibole crystals are oriented in a nematoblastic fabric and show alteration to biotite and chlorite.The garnet-amphibolite shows characteristic kelyphitic rims, composed of fine-grained zoisite, quartz and plagioclase, around garnet porphyroblasts (Fig. 4a).Plagioclase exhibits alteration to sericite, clinozoisite and epidote.The latter also occur as zoned crystals in the matrix.Garnet and amphibole yield abundant inclusions of rutile (Fig. 4b), whereas in the matrix rutile occurs exclusively in the core of ilmenite and titanite.Thus, rutile presumably belongs to a first paragenesis overprinted by the main paragenesis comprising hornblende + plagioclase + quartz ± garnet + ilmenite ± titanite + apatite + zircon.The occurrence of actinolite + biotite + chlorite + hematite indicates a later retrograde overprint.

Metasedimentary rocks
Biotite-plagioclase-paragneiss and coarse-grained, garnet-bearing two-mica paragneiss together with mica schist represent the metasedimentary host rock.Quartz, biotite, muscovite, plagioclase (± alkalifeldspar) garnet ± hornblende are the main minerals.Locally, chloritoid overgrows the foliation in mica schists.The metablastic recrystallization of albite, the formation of titanite seams around ilmenite grains, as well as sericitization, chloritization, and saussuritization indicate a retrograde overprint.Plagioclase shows polysynthetic twinning and saussuritization.Biotite (showing rutile exsolution structures) and white mica are often intergrown, forming bent and kinked mica packages.Hypidiomorphic garnet up to several millimeters in diameter is often fully chloritized.Accessory minerals are apatite, zircon, tourmaline, zoisite, ilmenite, titanite and rutile.The latter is anhedral and abundant in the matrix, often mantled by ilmenite and as poikiloblastic inclusions in plagioclase.The chondritenormalized Spider Plot (Fig. 7a) shows no Eu anomaly and exhibits a typical pattern for fine-grained sediments (McLennan, 2001).The enrichment of light Rare Earth Element (LREE) vs. heavy Rare Earth Element (HREE) presumably relates to the abundance of mica and heavy minerals.

Igneous rocks
Lenses of leucocratic granite gneiss, augen gneiss and pegmatite appear scattered across the metasedimentary host-rock of the Troiseck Complex.Still, the limited availability of outcrops hampers their correlation.The most important outcrops of plutonic rocks are located at the localities Haugsattel and Pfarrberg.Rhyolitic metavolcanics appear at the structural top, below the contact to the Mesozoic cover of the Troiseck Complex.All igneous rocks of the Troiseck-Floning Nappe fall into the granite (rhyolite for the metavolcanic rocks) field of the TAS classification diagram (Middlemost et al., 1994;Fig. 5a); the Zr/TiO 2 vs. SiO 2 diagram of Winchester & Floyd (1977) allows for the differentiation of the metavolcanic rocks (Fig. 5b).In the granite discrimination scheme of Frost & Frost (2008), the Haugsattel granite gneiss and the Pfarrberg augen gneiss show a ferroan trend, while the pegmatite samples plot in the magnesian field.The Modified Alkali-Lime Index (MALI; Frost & Frost, 2008;Fig. 5c), differentiates the granitoids of the Troiseck Complex into a calc-alkalic series (Haugsattel granite gneiss) and an alkali-calcic series (Pfarrberg augen gneiss); the pegmatite samples are partly alkalicalcic and calc-alkalic.

Haugsattel granite gneiss
A leucocratic twomica granite gneiss crops out at the Haugsattel on the main ridge of the Troiseck-Floning Nappe, with smaller lenses scattered across the Troiseck Complex.Quartz, alkali-feldspar, white mica, biotite and plagioclase (showing saussuritic and sericitic alteration) represent the main minerals.White mica often predominates over biotite.Hypidiomorphic garnet blasts and large, often zoned allanite crystals (up to 1 mm in diameter; Fig. 4c Frost & Frost, 2008) and plot in the calc-alkalic field (Fig. 5c).Low A/CNK values (molar proportions of Al 2 O 3 /(CaO + Na 2 O + K 2 O) ≤ 1.1) for both samples indicate S-type to minor I-type affinity (Chappell & White, 2001).Trace and rare elements exhibit enrichment in Rb, U, K, Pb, Nd and show a strong depletion in Ba, Nb, Ta, Sr, P and Ti as well as relatively flat distribution patterns in HREE.On chondrite-normalized REE diagrams, these rocks show a pronounced negative Eu anomaly (Eu/Eu* = 0.11 and 0.07; Fig. 7b).On the geotectonic discrimination diagrams, both samples plot in the field of volcanic-arc granites (VAG) and exhibit a similar source composition (Fig. 6b, c).

Pegmatite gneiss
Small lenses of pegmatite gneiss occur frequently within the metasediments.The rocks are mainly composed of quartz, coarse-grained plagioclase (showing saussuritic and sericitic alteration) and white mica.Garnet, alkali-feldspar (microcline) and biotite appear subordinately.Allanite, apatite, zircon, titanite and epidote are present as accessory minerals.Epidote shows overgrowth of acicular zoisite.  .Several elements such as Nb, Ta, Yb, Y show low contents at or below the detection limit, while others, such as Ba (305 and 785 ppm for 17R45 and 17R48, respectively) and Sr (645 and 193 ppm) are abundant.Zr content is rather low (≤ 30 ppm).In the chondrite-normalized REE diagram (Fig. 7c), sample 17R48 shows a flat profile with only very slight enrichment in LREE over HREE contents, while sample 17R45 shows no enrichment of LREE and depletion of HREE contents (analytical results mostly at or below the detection limit).Both samples exhibit positive Eu anomalies (Eu/Eu* = 2.45).Normalized to a primitive mantle (Fig. 7f ), the samples are characterized by negative Ce, Pr, Nd and Ti anomalies and enrichments in Ba, Pb and Sr.

Pfarrberg augen gneiss
In the southern part of the Troiseck-Floning Nappe, lenses of light-gray augen gneiss ("Helle Mikroklin-Augengneise"; Cornelius, 1936) intercalate with the metasediments e.g. at the locality Pfarrberg.The rocks form a few meters to a few tens of meters thick bodies and lenses subparallel to the main foliation that can be traced laterally over several kilometers.The rocks exhibit a mylonitic overprint with a pronounced subhorizontal stretching lineation.Alkali-feldspar porphyroblasts (2-8 mm in diameter) show inclusions of muscovite and quartz.The fine-grained matrix consists of    (Middlemost, 1994).b Zr/Ti vs Nb/Y discrimination diagram for Permian volcanic rocks after Winchester & Floyd (1977) revised by Pearce (1996).c FeOt/FeOt + MgO vs SiO 2 (Fe index) and Na 2 O + K 2 O-CaO vs. SiO 2 (MALI: modified alkali lime index) of Frost et al. (2001) was below detection), which results in a seagull-shaped pattern (Fig. 7d; Glazner et al., 2008).

Metavolcanic rocks of the Troiseck-Floning and Rosskogel Nappe
The lowermost part of the Permian to Triassic cover of the Troiseck-Complex is dominated by volcaniclastic metasediments; metavolcanics termed "porphyroids" are subordinate.Porphyritic rocks are also exposed southwest of the village Veitsch at Hochreiterkogel where a slight synform of the Troiseck-Floning Nappe (fold axes in the southwest dip towards northeast and fold axes in the northeast dip towards southwest) causes the preservation of a relatively narrow, north-south elongated klippe on top of structurally higher parts of the basement.The metarhyolite of the Lower Austroalpine Rosskogel porphyry is very similar and locally preserved primary flow structures in less-deformed parts (Nievoll, 1986).Gaal (1965) classified them as Permian rhyolitic metavolcanics.Alkali-feldspar phenocrysts, rounded quartz pebbles (up to 3 cm in diameter), and pyroclastic particles (lapilli) are surrounded by a fine-grained matrix composed of quartz, sericite (parallel to the foliation) and albite.Deformed rocks exhibit a well-developed stretching lineation and show strongly altered magmatic feldspar crystals.In less deformed rocks, embayed quartz grains and glassy fragments in the matrix preserved their magmatic shape.Accessory minerals are zircon, allanite, rutile and ilmenite.Dark-gray, biotite-rich metavolcanic rocks of andesitic composition (Gaal, 1965) are closely associated with the rhyolitic metavolcanic rocks of the Rosskogel Nappe.

Zircon U-Pb analyses
Cathodoluminescence (CL) images of zircon grains from representative samples of all magmatic rocks are  et al. (1984).Grey symbols represent data from Hintertal (square) and Hochreichart plutonic suites (triangle) presented in Mandl et al. (2022).c Source discrimination plot of Laurent et al. (2014).Symbols are the same as in Fig. 5 Fig. 7 Normalized multi-element diagrams ("Spider Plots").Chondrite-normalized REE patterns and primitive mantle normalized trace element (μg/g) distribution patterns (normalization values after McDonough & Sun, 1995) of samples from the Troiseck-Floning Nappe and the Rosskogel Nappe.a Paragneis and metabasites.b Haugsattel granite gneiss.The gray field visualizes the data from the corresponding Hochreichart Plutonic Suite (Mandl et al., 2018;2022).c Data from pegmatite gneiss lenses plotted together with data from pegmatitic dikes of the Seckau Nappe and sample MM3 (group 1; Mandl et al., 2018;2022).d Permian plutonic and volcanic rocks from the Troiseck-Floning Nappe (Pfarrberg augen gneiss and metarhyodacite).e Metavolcanic rocks of the Rosskogel Nappe.f Primitive-mantle normalized REE plots presented in Fig. 8.Most zircons show a well-developed growth-zoning pattern and display typical oscillatory zonation.U/Pb concordia diagrams and weighted mean ages are shown in Fig. 9.The dataset from detrital and inherited zircon grains is shown in Fig. 10.
Although the dataset of inherited grains in the metavolcanic sample from the Rosskogel Nappe (17R49) is just a byproduct and statistically not representative (n = 37), it nevertheless shows a similar late Ediacaran age peak (547.9 ± 7.3 Ma).A tentative comparison against the data from the Troiseck Complex (Fig. 10) shows a broader age range during the 450-580 Ma interval and several subpeaks at 631 Ma, 690 Ma, ~ 800 Ma and around 2 Ga for sample 17R49.

Haugsattel granite gneiss
Sample BYG17-037 yields euhedral, slightly rounded and mostly pink colored zircon crystals that are ca.100-250 μm in length with a prismatic to pyramidal crystal habit (aspect ratios mostly 1:2; with up to 1:5 for long-prismatic grains).The sample yielded a mid-Cambrian weighted mean age of 502.4 ± 6.8 Ma (n = 12, MSWD = 1.7).A smaller subset of Early Ordovician ages (475.8 ± 6.4 Ma, n = 9) from grains with variable Th/U ratios (0.3─2.1) did not provide a statistically meaningful age (MSWD = 17).Wavy and irregular internal textures indicate recrystallization of the zircons from this subset.Latest Silurian (422.1 ± 6.4 Ma, n = 4) and scattered Devonian to Carboniferous ages (395.9-355.9Ma) from overgrowth rims yield low Th/U ratios (< 0.1 or even < 0.01) that indicate a (poly-)metamorphic overprint (Fig. 9h).However, the inclusion of Th-rich REE-minerals (allanite is present in thin sections) could also account for the low Th/U ratios in some crystals.

Pegmatite-gneiss
Crystals from both pegmatite gneiss samples are mostly euhedral spindle-shaped to prismatic (aspect ratios of 1:2─1:5) with red-orange-yellow tinted alteration colors.Zircon grains in sample 17R45 are characterized by high U (581.5-2369 ppm) and low Th contents (2.2─34.43ppm), which results in very low Th/U-ratios 0.001-0.02indicating either a metamorphic origin or relate to high fractionation in an anatectic environment.Sample 17R48 shows a higher variability (U: 117.7─4013 ppm; Th: 15.87-370.3ppm) and a Th/U ratio ranging from 0.01 to 1.18.Together with resorbed internal shapes, this is indicative for dissolution-reprecipitation processes in both samples.To avoid these recrystallized parts, rims with oscillatory zoning were preferably targeted.The concordia plots (Fig. 9b, e) show several discordant data points, which presumably indicate Pb-loss during the overprinting of the cores.
The lower Mississippian weighted mean ages from both samples show a good agreement and overlap within error.Analysis of sample 17R45 provided a weighted mean age of 353.4 ± 4.9 Ma (n = 5, MSWD = 1.3), while sample 17R48 yields 353.4 ± 4.7 Ma (n = 7, MSWD = 1).A small subset of Pennsylvanian ages (~ 320 Ma, n = 4) can be observed in both samples, which is interpreted as (re-)crystallization age (Th/U ratio > 1.1).Sample 17R48 yields a few Cambrian to Cryogenian dates (~ 538.0 Ma, n = 2; 554 Ma; 699.5 Ma) from small, rounded and short-prismatic grains with Th/U ratios > 0.6 that presumably represent inherited grains either assimilated from the wall rock, or incorporated from the source.

Pfarrberg augen gneiss
The leucocratic augen gneiss from the Pfarrberg locality (sample 17R43) provides a mid-Permian weighted mean age (271.3 ± 3.6 Ma, n = 10, MSWD = 1.3;Fig. 9a).The paucity of zircon grains in this mylonitic gneiss calls for a meticulous mineral separation and sample preparation.Euhedral zircon crystals are ca.70-200 μm in length with a prismatic crystal habit (aspect ratios mostly 1:1-1:2; with a few up to 1:4) and are usually transparent, occasionally weakly pink in color.A generally high Th/U ratio in combination with the absence of metamorphic overgrowth rims points towards a magmatic origin of the zircon grains.A subpopulation of subhedral grains that yield Pennsylvanian ages (weighted mean age: 322.1 ± 4.3 Ma, n = 5) are interpreted as inherited grains (Fig. 8a).The oldest ages were obtained from xenocrystic cores (479-636 Ma).
Finally, zircon grains from a biotite-uralite schist (metaandesite; sample 17R50) are mostly broken fragments of euhedral crystals ca.150-200 μm in length with a yellow tint due to alteration.The sample yields a Permian weighted mean age of 264.3 ± 3.5 Ma (n = 17, MSWD = 1.4).Interestingly enough, when the youngest ages from this dataset are excluded, we obtain a slightly older and statistically slightly less robust weighted mean age of 267.62 ± 3.5 Ma (n = 13, MSWD = 2.7) that possibly relates to antecrystic zircons or extended growth in a magma chamber before eruption.Th/U ratios of all analyzed grains are higher than 0.5, indicating a magmatic origin of the zircon crystals.Two analyses from an inherited grain provided Pennsylvanian ages (316.7 and 319.6 Ma).

Biotite Rb-Sr analyses
The results of Rb-Sr geochronology are summarized in Table 2, related Rb-Sr biotite ages are displayed in Fig. 11.The investigated biotite grains are unaltered (Fig. 4g, i).Two samples from the Troiseck-Floning Nappe were analyzed: biotite from paragneiss sample 17R47 and leucogranite sample NO14/05 yielded 75.4 ± 1.5 Ma and 77.6 ± 1.5 Ma respectively.Biotite from metaandesite (sample 17R50) of the Rosskogel Nappe provides an age of 76.7 ± 1.5 Ma.Taking their standard deviations into account, these ages are more or less identical within error.

Geological evolution of the Troiseck-Floning Nappe from Neoproterozoic to Mesozoic times
Geochemical and geochronological data allow constraining the tectonometamorphic evolution of the Troiseck-Floning Nappe.This evolution is then compared against nearby crystalline basement complexes.

Paleogeographic constraints
Despite an ongoing discussion regarding the exact placement, there is a general agreement on the palaeogeographic position of the crystalline basement of the Silvretta-Seckau Nappe System at the northern margin of Gondwana during Neoproterozoic to Cambrian times (e.g.Mandl et al., 2018;Neubauer et al., 2020;Haas et al., 2020;Siegesmund et al., 2018;2021).The dominance of a late Neoproterozoic detrital zircon population (attributed to the Cadomian and Pan-African orogenies), together with less frequent Meso-to Palaeoproterozoic and Archaean ages from xenocrystic zircon cores constrains  et al., 2019a; 2019b).Comparable detrital age distributions were obtained from the Glaneck metamorphic suite (Seckau Complex; Mandl et al., 2018), from the Tatric Unit of the Western Carpathians (Kohút et al., 2022) and from the Waldbach Complex (Vorau Nappe; Chang et al., 2021).However, the presence of a significant Ordovician peak (~ 450 Ma) in the latter is at variance with the previously mentioned datasets.Thus, in accordance with the palaeogeographic considerations of other authors (e.g.Haas et al., 2020;Neubauer et al., 2022;Finger & Riegler, 2023) we localize the depositional area of the Troiseck Complex along the northeastern Gondwana margin close to the Arabian-Nubian Shield/Sahara Metacraton during Late Neoproterozoic times.The relative paucity of Major orogenic events are given as colored boxes.Plotted using IsoplotR (Vermeesch, 2018) Archean to Mesoproterozoic ages in our detrital dataset could reflect a separation from the Gondwana mainland (possibly by an evolving back-arc basin; Neubauer et al., 2022).Nevertheless, the absence of data might be only statistical and calls for a careful interpretation.

Late Ediacaran to Cambrian volcaniclastic sedimentation
The abundance of xenocrystic cores in the zircons of the Troiseck Complex shows the influence of a continental hinterland.Together with characteristic contents of immobile trace elements (e.g.Th, Nb, Y, Sc, Co) and typical La/Sc and Ti/Zr ratios in the geochemical signature of the rocks, they allow for the interpretation as continental island arc sediments (Bhatia & Crook, 1986) 1988).Tectonic and magmatic processes in a subductionaccretion complex (Zurbriggen, 2020), could account for the different trends in the geochemical composition of the amphibolite.Altogether, the metasediments of the Troiseck Complex show a good correlation with other late Ediacaran to Cambrian volcaniclastic metasedimentary sequences from the Silvretta-Seckau Nappe System (Mandl et al., 2018;Chang et al., 2021;Huang et al., 2021;Siegesmund et al., 2023).Despite the limited dataset, the age spectra of inherited zircon cores from metavolcanic rocks of the Rosskogel Nappe show significant differences to those of the Troiseck-Floning Nappe, with respect to the shape and distribution of the age peaks.However, the overlap in weighted mean ages from detrital zircon populations (553.0 ± 7.3 Ma sample 17R47 vs. 547.9± 7.3 Ma sample 17R49) indicate a common hinterland.Furthermore, the age distribution for sample 17R49 shows good agreement with results from the Wechsel Nappe (Lower Austroalpine Unit; Neubauer et al., 2020).Moreover, since the presented detrital age record is not compatible with the detrital age distribution obtained from lower Triassic quartzite of the Permian to Mesozoic cover, both nappes disqualify as source areas and presumably were not exposed at the surface during the Early Triassic (Haas et al., 2020).

Cambrian/Ordovician emplacement of volcanic arc granites
The mid-Cambrian intrusion age (502.4 ± 6.8 Ma) of the Haugsattel granite gneiss shows a good agreement with other mid-Cambrian to Ordovician granitic intrusions from neighboring basement complexes of the Silvretta-Seckau Nappe System (i.e.Seckau Complex, Mandl et al., 2018;Waldbach Complex, Chang et al., 2021;Gollingand Riesach Complex, Huang et al., 2021).The ferroan calc-alkalic signature of the Haugsattel granite gneiss is indicative for partial melting of quartzo-feldspathic igneous sources (Frost & Frost, 2011;Frost et al., 2016) and the discrimination diagram of Pearce (1984) displays geochemical characteristics of volcanic-arc granites, which allows the correlation with the Hochreichart plutonic suite of Mandl et al., (2018;2022).Accordingly, the Haugsattel melt intruded the volcaniclastic metasediments of the Troiseck Complex along an active peri-Gondwana margin during mid-Cambrian times.This allows for ambiguous interpretations either (i) as a late-stage intrusion along the Cadomian arc (Linnemann et al., 2014;Burda & Klötzli, 2011)  2008).Of special interest in this context is the interpretation of ultramafic rocks from the Speik Complex (Seckau Nappe) as suboceanic mantle of an oceanic basin that underwent melting in a supra-subduction zone setting during the early Cambrian (Melcher & Meisel, 2004).(iv) A fourth scenario (following the model of Finger & Riegler, 2023), proposes margin-parallel transport of basement complexes (such as the Troiseck and Seckau complexes) and their subsequent incorporation in two separate Cadomian and Cenerian orogens (located in front of the Sahara Metacraton and the Arabian-Nubian Shield, respectively).Ordovician ages of recrystallized zircon grains with variable Th/U ratios from the Haugsattel granite gneiss indicate ongoing magmatism and accompanying metamorphism, probably during the Cenerian orogeny.

Devonian to Carboniferous metamorphism and granite emplacement
Parts of the Silvretta-Seckau Nappe System experienced high-pressure metamorphism during the Variscan orogeny (Faryad et al., 2002;Thöni, 2006).A subsequent and pervasive amphibolite-facies metamorphic overprint mostly obliterated the earlier overprint, but rutile inclusions observed in garnet and amphibole crystals (sample 19MR98) could represent remnants of a highpressure paragenesis.Scattered Devonian to earliest Carboniferous ages from metamorphic overgrowth rims on zircon grains from the Haugsattel granite gneiss, the emplacement of pegmatite dikes during the Mississippian (353.4 ± 4.7 Ma) and Late Devonian/Carboniferous post-metamorphic cooling ages (Handler, 1994;Schmidt, 1999) prove an early Variscan overprint of the Troiseck Complex.Late Devonian to early Mississippian granitic/ tonalitic intrusions, pegmatitic dikes, and migmatization of metasediments and amphibolites (generation of trondhjemitic melt) are reported from the neighboring Seckau Nappe (Neubauer et al., 2003;Mandl et al., 2018;2022).Similar successions are reported from the Tatric and Veporic Unit of the Western Carpathians (e.g.Putiš et al., 2009a;Gawęda et al., 2016;Kohút & Larionov, 2021;Broska et al., 2022).The studied pegmatite samples could therefore originate from (i) residual melts related to large plutonic bodies (cf.igneous source rock as indicated in Fig. 6c and good agreement between sample 17R48 and dike group 2 of Mandl et al., 2022 in Fig. 7d), (ii) anatectic melts from metasediments (Knoll et al., 2023) or (iii) magmatic differentiation following the partial melting of amphibolite (Neubauer, 1988;Neubauer et al., 2003).The peculiar chemical properties (plagioclase-rich, low-K 2 O, magnesian, calc-alkalic to weakly alkali-calcic, weakly peraluminous, sodic) as well as the geochemical and petrographical properties agree with a trondhjemitictonalitic composition and match the definition of TTGs (tonalite-trondhjemite-granodiorite) sensu-stricto (O'Connor, 1965;Frost et al., 2001;Moyen & Martin, 2012;Bonin et al., 2020).Field observations of restitic hornblende closely associated with veins of anatectic melt in the amphibolite show that the observed negative Ti and Nb anomalies and the positive Eu anomaly possibly correlates with the retention of hornblende at the site of partial melting (cf.Drummond & Defant, 1990).The strong LREE/HREE fractionation in sample 17R45 probably relates to melting of a garnet-bearing amphibolite (Rapp et al., 1991;Foley et al., 2002).On the other hand, these properties can also be explained by strong wall rock-pegmatite interaction, hydrothermal alteration and anatectic melting of metasediments.

Permian magmatism in the Troiseck-Floning and Rosskogel nappes
Continental rifting and associated lithospheric thinning during Permian times led to decompression melting in the mantle lithosphere (Schuster & Stüwe, 2008).Accompanying mafic underplating and secondary crustal melting reportedly caused granite and pegmatite intrusions at mid-crustal levels and widespread high-temperature/ low-pressure metamorphism in the Adria-derived units of the European Alps (e.g.Thöni and Miller, 2000;Thöni & Miller, 2009;Schuster et al., 2001).Permian intrusions, often associated with A-type affinity, are widely reported from the eastern periphery of the Alps (Knoll et al., 2018;Chen et al., 2020;Yuan et al., 2020;Huang et al., 2021;2022) and from the Western Carpathians (Villaseñor et al., 2021;Ondrejka et al., 2021, and references therein).The presented Guadalupian intrusion age for the Pfarrberg augen gneiss (271.3 ± 3.6 Ma) shows a good correlation with the aforementioned studies.
Although the Pfarrberg augen gneiss does not meet the classical criteria for A-type granites (Whalen et al., 1987), its ferroan, alkali-calcic and strongly peraluminous character is characteristic for high-temperature melting of crustal lithologies in a post-orogenic setting (Frost et al., 2001) and related to the assimilation of a greater amount of felsic crust (Frost & Frost, 2011).The geochemical signature evident in REE-plots (strong Eu-anomaly, flat REE profile; Fig. 7d) indicates extensive fractionation of plagioclase in a hot, dry magma (Bachmann & Bergantz, 2008).Additional constraints on the timing of Permian magmatism come from metavolcanic rocks that cover the Troiseck-Floning Nappe and Rosskogel Nappe.Guadalupian ages from the porphyritic samples show a close chronological correlation, with the metarhyolite from the Rosskogel Nappe (271 Ma vs. 269 Ma).Thus, the effusive activity is coeval with the intrusion of the Pfarrberg augen gneiss.The presence/absence of a negative Eu-anomaly, together with Sr, Nd and Ti depletions observed in the metarhyolite samples are consistent with a magma that underwent a variable degree of fractional crystallization and moderate crustal assimilation.The quasi-contemporaneous calc-alkalic metaandesite of the Rosskogel Nappe (crystallization age of 264 Ma) indicates bimodal magmatism (cf.different source rocks in Fig. 6c), which is typically associated with rift-settings.This variability in the magmatic source of post-collision granites hampers their classification (Pearce, 1996).Therefore, although the Permian volcanic and plutonic rocks are associated with a post-collision setting, they plot in the field of syn-collision granites in the geotectonic discrimination diagram of Pearce et al., (1984;Fig. 5b).The high number of xenocrysts supports an extremely low zircon fertility of the Rosskogel porphyroid magma.Coeval calcalkalic to subalkalic volcanic suites composed of andesite, rhyolite and rhyodacite (267 to 262 Ma) unconformably cover the metamorphic basement of the Infratatric and Veporic units in the Western Carpathians (Putiš et al., 2016;Vozárová et al., 2020).Andesitic volcanism, albeit of early Permian age, is reported from the Subpenninic Unit of the Tauern Window (Veselá et al., 2008), Briançonnais Unit of the Western Alps (Ballèvre et al., 2020) and the Southalpine Unit (e.g.Visonà et al., 2007).
The presented 87 Rb/ 86 Sr analyses on biotite (75.4 ± 1.5 Ma and 77.6 ± 1.5 Ma from the Troiseck-Floning Nappe and 76.7 ± 1.5 Ma from the Rosskogel Nappe) show a good agreement with previously published 87 Rb/ 86 Sr analyses from the Troiseck-Floning and Seckau nappes (Handler, 1994;Dallmeyer et al., 1998;Schmidt, 1999;Pfingstl et al., 2015).Together, the data constrain Late Cretaceous cooling from greenschist-facies metamorphic conditions and exhibit a trend towards younger ages in the east (85 Ma vs. 75 Ma).Separation of the Troiseck-Floning and Seckau nappes along the Trofaiach Fault and a general strike-slip dominated fault regime occurred in the course of final cooling and exhumation of the study area during Oligocene/Miocene times (van Gelder et al., 2020).

Correlation of the Troiseck complex with neighboring units of the Silvretta-Seckau Nappe system
Retrodeformation of the sinistral displacement along the Trofaiach Fault juxtaposes the Troiseck-Floning Nappe against the Seckau Nappe.The latter comprises the Seckau, Amering, and Speik complexes (Becker, 1980 andcompiled map of Pfingstl et al., 2015).Steeply inclined ductile shear zones, presumably of Alpine age, later partially reactivated as sinistral strike-slip faults, dissect the Seckau Nappe (Neubauer, 1988).The Speik Complex representing a pre-alpine ophiolite composed of amphibolite, ultramafic rocks and minor metasediments was emplaced on the Amering Complex along a Variscan(?)tectonic contact.The stronger Eo-Alpine overprint of the Amering Complex (Late Cretaceous cooling from amphibolite-facies metamorphic conditions; Neubauer et al., 1995) and the different geologic context of the Speik Complex preclude their correlation with the Troiseck Complex.While granitic intrusions occupy large areas in western parts of the Seckau Complex (Mandl et al., 2018), this predominance decreases towards the east where metasediments and metabasites were intruded by the Rennfeld tonalite (353 Ma; Neubauer et al., 2003).
Although the Troiseck Complex predominantly consists of metasediments and metabasites with only scattered lenses of igneous rocks, the similar lithostratigraphy and geologic evolution, the laterally continuous fold structures, and the mutual low-grade Alpine overprint (less than 450 °C; Scharbert, 1981;Mandl et al., 2018;Pfingstl et al., 2015) show a good correlation between the Seckau and Troiseck complexes.
The Waldbach Complex of the Vorau Nappe, located to the southeast of the Troiseck-Floning Nappe, occupies a similar tectonic position in the hanging wall of the Lower Austroalpine Wechsel Nappe and below an element of the Koralpe-Wölz Nappe System (Stuhleck-Kirchberg Nappe).The tectonic contact between the Vorau and Wechsel nappes exhibits Late Cretaceous deformation under greenschist-facies metamorphic conditions (Dallmeyer et al., 1996;Schuster & Nowotny, 2016).The crystalline basement comprises two different lithological entities, the upper level is composed of granitic orthogneiss, hornblende gneiss, and amphibolite/metagabbro, while the lower level consists of quartzite, sulfidic blackschist and a thick layer of coarse-grained garnet-mica schist that are interpreted as Devonian metasediments (Flügel & Neubauer, 1984;Neubauer et al., 2022).The metasediments from the upper level of the Waldbach Complex represent a late Ediacaran to Cambrian juvenile magmatic arc that was intruded by Cambrian to Ordovician granitic bodies and which underwent (upper) amphibolite-facies metamorphism during the Variscan orogeny (Chang et al., 2021).Despite lithological differences in the lower part of the Waldbach Complex and a stronger retrogressive overprint during the Eo-Alpine evolution, both complexes occupy a comparable structural position and share a similar Cambro-Ordovician and Variscan evolution.Thus, we would like to point out the similarities between the upper part of the Waldbach Complex and the Troiseck Complex, especially in comparison to the other units below (Wechsel Nappe) and above (Stuhleck-Kirchberg Nappe).

Unravelling parallels between the Troiseck-Floning Nappe and the Western Carpathians
In this chapter, we would like to emphasize the similarities in the geological evolution of the Troiseck Complex and the Tatric and Veporic units of the Western Carpathians.Mandl et al. (2018) also pointed out parallels between the latter and the Seckau Complex.The crystalline basement of the Tatric Unit occupied a palaeogeographic position in the eastern domain of the Gondwana margin (Kohút et al., 2022), which is comparable to the position of the Seckau and Troiseck complexes (Mandl et al., 2018;this study).Both Tatric and Veporic units comprise medium to high-grade metamorphic rocks (e.g.Moussallam et al., 2012;Petrik et al., 2020;Burda et al., 2021;Janák et al., 2022), Cambro-Ordovician (Putiš et al., 2009a) and Late Devonian-early Carboniferous granitic intrusions (Gawęda et al., 2016;Uher et al., 2019;Kohút & Larionov, 2021;Broska et al., 2022;Catlos et al., 2022).Permian magmatism is widespread in the Western Geochronology, geochemistry, and geological evolution of the Troiseck-Floning and Rosskogel nappes (Eastern Alps) Carpathians (e.g.Ondrejka et al., 2021;Villaseñor et al., 2021).Lithostratigraphic units that constitute the crystalline basement of the Western Carpathians (cf.Putiš et al., 2009a) allow for potential correlations with previously described pre-Alpine basement complexes of the Seckau Nappe, Troiseck-Floning Nappe and Vorau Nappe.In the Tatric Unit, these subunits are referred to as upper and lower étage (Kohút et al., 2022).The lower étage comprises late Ediacaran to early Silurian migmatitic metasediments that intercalate with metabasites (amphibolite and remnants of retrogressed eclogite; Burda et al., 2021) and which were intruded by Cambrian-Ordovician and Late Devonian-early Carboniferous granitoids.Partly, the rocks experienced a Variscan eclogite-facies metamorphic overprint, followed by isothermal decompression and associated migmatization with trondhjemitic melt formation (Moussallam et al., 2012).This evolution shows great similarity with the pre-Alpine evolution of the Troiseck and Seckau complexes and with the upper level of the Waldbach Complex (Troiseck-Floning Nappe, Seckau Nappe and Vorau Nappe, respectively).The upper étage consists of late Silurian-Devonian volcaniclastic metasediments, metabasites (epidote-actinolite amphibolite), black shale and lenses of calc-silicate gneiss (Kohút et al., 2022), which might correspond to the lower level of the Waldbach Complex for which Neubauer et al. (2022) postulate a Devonian sedimentation age.
In the course of Cretaceous nappe stacking, the Tatric and Veporic units ended up in different structural positions.On a geological map of the Western Carpathians (Plašienka, 2018), the Tatric Unit occupies a structurally lower position in the NW.It only recorded a low-grade metamorphic Alpine overprint and the basement largely preserved its Variscan mineral assemblage and structure.In contrast, the Veporic Unit experienced Alpine ductile deformation and greenschist to lower amphibolite-facies metamorphism (Janák et al., 2001;Jeřábek et al., 2012;Plašienka, 2018; and references therein) with a thermal peak at ca. 100 Ma (Vojtko et al., 2016).Both, Tatric and Veporic units show syn-collisional exhumation from around 80 Ma onwards with a slightly earlier onset of exhumation for the latter (Putiš et al., 2009b;Králiková et al., 2014;2016;Vojtko et al., 2016).With respect to the grade of Eo-Alpine overprint, the Troiseck and Seckau complexes are thus in the range of the Tatric Unit and northern parts of the Veporic Unit.Also, the timing of Late Cretaceous exhumation (Pfingstl et al., 2015; this study) and final cooling in the Cenozoic is similar (Kralikova et al., 2016;van Gelder et al., 2020).However, the internal style of the nappe stack in the Eastern Alps and Western Carpathians shows remarkable differences (Froitzheim et al., 2008), which precludes a one-to-one correlation of the units.

Conclusions
The combination of whole-rock geochemistry, U-Pb zircon dating and Rb-Sr biotite geochronology provides important constraints on the geological evolution of the Troiseck-Floning Nappe from Neoproterozoic to Mesozoic times.The Troiseck Complex developed from clastic sediments and basic volcanic rocks deposited at a juvenile continental magmatic arc along the northeastern Gondwana margin during late Ediacaran to mid-Cambrian times.In the late Cambrian to Early Ordovician (510-480 Ma), volcanic-arc granitoids intruded the volcano-sedimentary host-rock of the Troiseck Complex.Accompanying metamorphism correlates with the emplacement in an active margin setting.
In the course of the Variscan orogeny, the Troiseck Complex experienced deformation at amphibolitefacies metamorphic conditions and Late Devonian/ early Carboniferous intrusions (~ 353 Ma) of calcalkalic leucogranite bodies and pegmatite dikes.The latter indicate melting of a metasedimentary and/or amphibolitic protolith and presumably formed during exhumation after an early Variscan metamorphic overprint.A second overprint during Carboniferous times (~ 320 Ma) relates to a late Variscan event.
The deposition of Permian clastic sediments and rhyolitic to andesitic volcanic rocks (271-264 Ma) constrains a surface position of the Troiseck Complex and the former basement of the Rosskogel Nappe during Permian times.The contemporaneous intrusion of the Pfarrberg augen gneiss (~ 271 Ma) represents the plutonic counterpart.To account for high-temperature magma generation and bimodal magmatism, we suggest an extensional (rift-related) environment that correlates well with regional considerations from the Eastern Alps and Western Carpathians.
In Triassic times, siliciclastic sediments (quartz arenite) followed by carbonate shelf sediments were deposited on top of the Troiseck Complex and the overlying volcanic rocks.The Troiseck-Floning Nappe formed during the Eo-Alpine collision, where it was part of the tectonic lower plate.A lower greenschist-facies metamorphic overprint that failed to obliterate pre-Alpine structures and geochronological data indicates subduction to only shallow crustal levels.Late Cretaceous exhumation of the Troiseck-Floning Nappe from about 85 Ma onwards shows a gradient with more pronounced uplift and erosion in the eastern part.
Based on their analogous geological evolution, the Troiseck-Floning Nappe represents the eastern continuation of the Seckau Nappe.A similar type of basement occurs in parts of the Vorau Nappe (Chang et al., 2021;Neubauer et al., 2022) and in the Tatric and Veporic units of the Western Carpathians (e.g.Kohút et al., 2022).Altogether, the presented data closes a gap in the easternmost part of the Silvretta-Seckau Nappe System and provides new constraints for the correlation between the Eastern Alps and the Western Carpathians.

Fig. 2
Fig. 2 Tectonic map of the northwestern part of the Eastern Alps based on a database of GeoSphere Austria in scale 1:500.000.The main tectonic features of the working area are indicated.The red polygon indicates the area visualized in Fig. 3

Fig. 3
Fig. 3 Geological map showing the lithological content of the Troiseck-Floning, Seckau and Rosskogel nappes based on a database of GeoSphere Austria in scale 1:200.000.The principal rock columns of the Troiseck-Floning and Rosskogel nappes are visualized in the upper left corner.Sample localities are indicated on the map (coordinates are given inTable 1)

Fig. 4
Fig. 4 Field and thin section photographs of representative samples.Abbreviations of mineral names according to Whitney & Evans (2010).a Garnet-amphibolite with characteristic kelyphitic rims around garnet (pen for scale).b Rutile inclusions in amphibole and in relictic garnet.c Large, zoned allanite minerals associated with zoisite and epidote in the Haugsattel granite gneiss.d Alkali-feldspar porphyroblasts in the fine-grained matrix; arrow points to small myrmekitic structures.e Amoeboid garnet surrounded by coarse-grained plagioclase, quartz and muscovite grains.Undulose extinction in quartz and flame-shape twinning in plagioclase (lower right corner) relates to deformation.f Aphanitic matrix with alkali-feldspar blasts in metarhyolite.g Large and unaltered biotite flakes in the paragneiss sample.h Porphyritic texture in metarhyolite showing a large, rotated alkali-feldspar blast in a fine-grained matrix composed of recrystallized quartz, plagioclase and muscovite.i Aggregates of acicular actinolite and large, unaltered biotite flakes in metaandesite of the Rosskogel Nappe

Fig. 9
Fig. 9 U/Pb concordia and weighted mean diagrams: a Pfarrberg augen gneiss.b Pegmatite gneiss.c Metarhyodacite.d Paragneiss.e Pegmatite gneiss.f Metarhyolite.g Metaandesite.h Haugsattel granite gneiss.Weighted mean ages are provided with propagated errors and were calculated based on dates marked in green

Fig. 10
Fig. 10 Combined frequency and relative probability plots of detrital and inherited zircon grains.Diagrams show a detrital grains from the Troiseck-Floning Nappe and b inherited grains from the Rosskogel Nappe.Panels on the left show an age range from 400 to 3500 Ma (bin width = 25 Ma, bandwidth 35 Ma), panels on the right provide a more detailed view on the 400-1000 Ma age range (bin width = 10 Ma, bandwidth 15 Ma).Major orogenic events are given as colored boxes.Plotted using IsoplotR(Vermeesch, 2018) , (ii) as an early stage intrusion related to the Cenerian orogeny (490 -440 Ma; Zurbriggen, 2017) or (iii) as intrusions related to the mid-Cambrian closure of Late Neoproterozoic to Cambrian back-arc basins (von Raumer & Stampfli,

Fig. 11
Fig. 11 Rb-Sr biotite-whole-rock ages from the Troiseck-Floning and Rosskogel nappes.Age calculation with IsoplotR and analytical results given in Table 2

Table 1
Sample locations and analytical methods ) locally intergrown with epidote/zoisite are characteristic.Biotite shows sagenitic rutile needles and partial replacement by secondary chlorite.The mica minerals are oriented parallel to a weak foliation.Other accessories are apatite and zircon.The samples are characterized by a high silica (76.29 & 77.88 wt % SiO 2 ), intermediate Al 2 O 3 content (11.65-12.28wt %) and low Na 2 O and CaO (3.07 & 3.83 wt % and 0.41 & 0.51 wt %, respectively) contents.The K 2 O content is slightly elevated (5.01 & 3.56 wt %) with a K 2 O/ Na 2 O ratio of 1.66 for sample BYG18-111.Both samples exhibit a ferroan character (FeO tot /(FeO tot + MgO) > 0.8; Fe 2 O 3 * + MgO + MnO + TiO 2 ≤ 0.6 wt %, Fe 2 O 3 * = total Fe expressed as Fe 2 O 3 Frost & Frost (2008)ite mica/sericite and small, biotitized garnet blasts.Allanite, tourmaline, zoisite, rutile, ilmenite, epidote, apatite and zircon represent accessory minerals.The samples 17R43 and 17R44 exhibit high silica contents of 73.25 and 73.75 wt % while Al 2 O 3 shows intermediate values(14.46-14.58wt%).Na 2 O (3.79 and 3.57 wt %) and K 2 O content are slightly elevated (4.9 and 4.61 wt %) and the K 2 O/ Na 2 O ratio is 1.29 for both samples.According to the classification ofFrost & Frost (2008), both samples show a ferroan character (FeO tot /(FeO tot + MgO) > 0.8) and are alkali-calcic, peraluminous (A/CNK ratio 1.19 and 1.26).The trace element geochemistry indicates enrichments in Cs, Rb, Ta, Pb, Sr and depletions in Ba, Nb, La, Ce, Pr, Sr, Eu and Ti.The Zr content is rather low for an orthogneiss (≤ 40 ppm).On the chondrite-normalized REE diagram, both samples exhibit flat REE patterns ((La/ Yb) N = 1.28-2.96)and strongly negative Eu anomalies ((Eu/Eu*) N = 0.06 for sample 17R43; in sample 17R44 Eu . As Sr decreases due to the weathering of feldspar with increasing maturity, the high Sr content, together with low Cr and Ni, which are adsorbed by clay minerals, indicate low maturity of the sediments.The detrital age record from the Troiseck Complex shows a dominant peak of Ediacaran to early Cambrian zircon ages that indicate a strong influence of Cadomian magmatism in the hinterland.

Table 2
Rb-Sr isotopic data on biotite and whole-rock from the Troiseck-Floning and Rosskogel nappes Analytical techniques are described in text.Ages were calculated from biotite (Bt) and corresponding whole-rock (WR) assuming an error of ± 1% on the 87 Rb/ 86 Sr ratio