The Sanabria Lake plutons, located in the Central Iberian Zone of the Iberian Massif, intruded in a dextral
strike-slip fault bridge under transpressive conditions. The deformed zone underwent a strain partitioning
process, so that large folded domains and narrow shear zones were developed coevally. The microstructural
study of the granitoids shows that the shear zones concentrate a variable degree of solid state deformation
at high and medium temperatures, whereas the folded areas preserve microstructural evidences of magmatic
and submagmatic flow at high temperatures, too. The most common fabric in these folded areas is defined
by two sets of conjugate planes, composed by aligned crystals of plagioclase and biotite, which are bisected
by the flow foliation. These conjugate bands represent an incipient phase of the strain localization process
that involves strain weakening, migration of the late-magmatic melts and enhancement of the shear zones