The structure of a major suture zone in the SW Iberian Massif: the Ossa-Morena/Central Iberian contact

2001 ◽  
Vol 332 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 295-308 ◽  
Author(s):  
J.F. Simancas ◽  
D.Martı́nez Poyatos ◽  
I. Expósito ◽  
A. Azor ◽  
F.González Lodeiro
Keyword(s):  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rubén Díez Fernández ◽  
Jerónimo Matas ◽  
Ricardo Arenas ◽  
Luis Miguel Martín-Parra ◽  
Sonia Sánchez Martínez ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT The Porvenir serpentinites are an ∼600-m-thick body of meta-peridotites exposed in SW Iberia (Variscan Orogen). The serpentinites occur as a horse within a Carboniferous, out-of-sequence thrust system (Espiel thrust). This thrust juxtaposes the serpentinites and peri-Gondwanan strata onto younger peri-Gondwanan strata, with the serpentinites occupying an intermediate position. Reconstruction of the pre-Espiel thrust structure results in a vertical juxtaposition of terranes: Cambrian strata below, Porvenir serpentinites in the middle, and the strata at the footwall to the Espiel thrust culminating the tectonic pile. The reconstructed tectonic pile accounts for yet another major thrusting event, since a section of upper mantle (Porvenir serpentinites) was sandwiched between two tectonic slices of continental crust (a suture zone sensu lato). The primary lower plate to the suture is now overlying the upper plate due to the Espiel thrust. Lochkovian strata in the upper plate and the Devonian, NE-verging folds in the lower plate suggest SW-directed accretion of the lower plate during the Devonian, i.e., Laurussia-directed underthrusting for the closure of a Devonian intra-Gondwana basin. Obduction of the Porvenir serpentinites was a two-step process: one connected to the development of a Devonian suture zone, and another related to out-of-sequence thrusting that cut the suture zone and brought upward a tectonic slice of upper mantle rocks hosted in that suture. The primary Laurussia-dipping geometry inferred for this partially obducted suture zone fits the geometry, kinematics, and timing of the Late Devonian suture zone exposed in NW Iberia and may represent the continuation of such suture into SW Iberia.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rubén Díez Fernández ◽  
Ricardo Arenas ◽  
Esther Rojo-Pérez ◽  
Sonia Sánchez Martínez ◽  
José Manuel Fuenlabrada

Abstract. Dividing a crystalline basement into tectonostratigraphic units, along with the recognition of the nature of their boundaries (primary vs. tectonic), are essential steps to identify major tectonic slices involved in orogeny. The Neoproterozoic and Paleozoic rocks of the Mérida Massif (SW Iberia) have been grouped into five tectonostratigraphic units according to their structural position, continental or oceanic crust affinity, and equivalent tectonometamorphic evolution. Each unit is separated from the rest ones by either crustal-scale thrusts and/or extensional detachments. The lowermost unit (Magdalena Gneisses; lower plate) has continental crust affinity, and rest below a variably strained and metamorphosed mafic-ultramafic ensemble, referred to as the Mérida Ophiolite (suture zone). The Neoproterozoic Montemolín Formation of the Serie Negra Group constitutes a unit with continental crust affinity (Upper Schist-Metagranitoid Unit; upper plate) located on top of the Mérida Ophiolite. A carbonate-rich succession (Carija Unit) occupies the uppermost structural position. Structural and isotopic data suggest that the suture zone depicted by the Mérida Ophiolite and the tectonic piling and main foliation of the Neoproterozoic and Cambrian units were formed during the Cadomian Orogeny. Superimposed shortening during the late Paleozoic formed a train of upright to NE-verging folds and thrusts that affected the Cadomian suture zone and juxtaposed it onto Ordovician strata (fifth tectonostratigraphic unit) during the Variscan Orogeny. Cenozoic contraction during the Alpine Orogeny formed SW-directed thrusts in an intraplate setting. The Mérida Ophiolite represents a new Cadomian suture zone exposure of the Iberian Massif, but its root zone is yet to be identified. This suture zone exposure seems to share a far-travelled nature with other Cadomian and Variscan suture zone exposures in Iberia, making the latter a piece of continental lithosphere built at the expense of allochthonous terranes transferred inland from peri-Gondwana onto mainland Gondwana, both during the Neoproterozoic-Cambrian and the Devonian-Carboniferous.


Author(s):  
J. R. Martínez Catalán ◽  
J. Gómez Barreiro ◽  
Í. Dias da Silva ◽  
M. Chichorro ◽  
A. López-Carmona ◽  
...  
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