Geochemical signature of the Egersund basaltic dyke swarm, SW Norway, in the context of late-Neoproterozoic opening of the Iapetus Ocean

1999 ◽  
Vol 79 (2) ◽  
pp. 69-86 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bernard Bingen ◽  
Daniel Demaiffe
1995 ◽  
Vol 32 (3) ◽  
pp. 273-280 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. L. Kamo ◽  
T. E. Krogh ◽  
P. S. Kumarapeli

U–Pb baddeleyite and zircon ages for three diabase dykes from widely spaced localities within the Grenville dyke swarm indicate a single age of emplacement at [Formula: see text] Ma. The 700 km long Grenville dyke swarm, located in the southeastern part of the Canadian Shield, was emplaced syntectonically with the development of the Ottawa graben. This graben may represent a plume-generated lapetan failed arm that developed at the onset of the breakup of Laurentia. Other precisely dated lapetan rift-related units, such as the Callander Alkaline Complex and the Tibbit Hill Formation volcanic rocks, indicate a protracted 36 Ma period of rifting and magmatism prior to volcanism along this segment of the lapetan margin. The age of the Grenville dykes is the youngest in a progression of precisely dated mafic magmatic events from the 723 Ma Franklin dykes and sills to the 615 Ma Long Range dykes, along the northern and northeastern margins of Laurentia, respectively. Thus, the age for these dykes represents a key time marker for continental breakup that preceded the formation of the Iapetus ocean.


2014 ◽  
Vol 41 (2) ◽  
pp. 165 ◽  
Author(s):  
David M. Chew ◽  
Cees R. Van Staal

A combination of deep seismic imaging and drilling has demonstrated that the ocean-continent transition (OCT) of present-day, magma-poor, rifted continental margins is a zone of hyperextension characterized by extreme thinning of the continental crust that exhumed the lowermost crust and/or serpentinized continental mantle onto the seafloor. The OCT on present-day margins is difficult to sample, and so much of our knowledge on the detailed nature of OCT sequences comes from obducted, magma-poor OCT ophiolites such as those preserved in the upper portions of the Alpine fold-and-thrust belt. Allochthonous, lens-shaped bodies of ultramafic rock are common in many other ancient orogenic belts, such as the Caledonian – Appalachian orogen, yet their origin and tectonic significance remains uncertain. We summarize the occurrences of potential ancient OCTs within this orogen, commencing with Laurentian margin sequences where an OCT has previously been inferred (the Dalradian Supergroup of Scotland and Ireland and the Birchy Complex of Newfoundland). We then speculate on the origin of isolated occurrences of Alpine-type peridotite within Laurentian margin sequences in Quebec – Vermont and Virginia – North Carolina, focusing on rift-related units of Late Neoproterozoic age (so as to eliminate a Taconic ophiolite origin). A combination of poor exposure and pervasive Taconic deformation means that origin and emplacement of many ultramafic bodies in the Appalachians will remain uncertain. Nevertheless, the common occurrence of OCT-like rocks along the whole length of the Appalachian – Caledonian margin of Laurentia suggests that the opening of the Iapetus Ocean may have been accompanied by hyperextension and the formation of magma-poor margins along many segments.SOMMAIREDes travaux d’imagerie sismique et des forages profonds ont montré que la transition océan-continent (OCT) de marges continentales de divergence pauvre en magma exposée de nos jours, correspond à une zone d’hyper-étirement tectonique caractérisée par un amincissement extrême de la croûte continentale, qui a exhumé sur le fond marin, jusqu’à la tranche la plus profonde de la croûte continentale, voire du manteau continental serpentinisé.  Parce qu’on peut difficilement échantillonner l’OCT sur les marges actuelles, une grande partie de notre compréhension des détails de la nature de l’OCT provient d’ophiolites pauvres en magma d’une OCT obduite, comme celles préservées dans les portions supérieures de la bande plissée alpine.  Des masses lenticulaires de roches ultramafiques allochtones sont communes dans de nombreuses autres bandes orogéniques anciennes, comme l’orogène Calédonienne-Appalaches, mais leur origine et signification tectonique reste incertaine.  Nous présentons un sommaire des occurrences d’OCT potentielles anciennes de cet orogène, en commençant par des séquences de la marge laurentienne, où la présence d’OCT a déjà été déduites (le Supergroupe Dalradien d’Écosse et d'Irlande, et le complexe de Birchy de Terre-Neuve).  Nous spéculons ensuite sur l'origine de cas isolés de péridotite de type alpin dans des séquences de marge des Laurentides du Québec-Vermont et de la Virginie-Caroline du Nord, en nous concentrant sur les unités de rift d'âge néoprotérozoïque tardif (pour éviter les ophiolites du Taconique).  La conjonction d’affleurements de piètre qualité et de la déformation taconique omniprésente, signifie que l'origine et la mise en place de nombreuses masses ultramafiques dans les Appalaches demeureront incertaines.  Néanmoins, la présence fréquente de roches de type OCT tout le long de la marge Calédonnienne-Appalaches de Laurentia suggère que l'ouverture de l'océan Iapetus peut avoir été accompagnée d’hyper-étirement et de la formation de marges pauvres en magma le long de nombreux segments.


Geology ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 48 (9) ◽  
pp. 929-933 ◽  
Author(s):  
B. Robert ◽  
M. Domeier ◽  
J. Jakob

Abstract The Iapetus Ocean opened during the breakup of Rodinia by the separation of the major continental blocks of Laurentia (LA), Baltica, and Amazonia (AM). Relics of protracted continental extension to rifting from 750 to 530 Ma are observed along those continental margins, including two distinct phases of rifting: (1) at 750–680 Ma, and (2) at 615–550 Ma. Conventionally, the second phase is thought to have led to the opening of the Iapetus, while the first phase marked a failed rifting attempt. We challenge this concept on the basis of a new review of the geological observations from those margins and propose the successive opening of two “Iapetan” ocean basins. First, a “Paleo-Iapetus” opened between LA and AM at ca. 700 Ma, followed by the opening of the “Neo-Iapetus” at 600 Ma, which led to the final disaggregation of the supercontinent Rodinia. This scenario better explains the absence of the second rifting phase in western AM, as well as an otherwise enigmatic late Neoproterozoic detrital zircon age fraction in Phanerozoic sediments along that margin. We further propose that the opening of the Neo-Iapetus led to the detachment of small terranes from LA and their drift toward AM, following subduction of the Paleo-Iapetus mid-ocean ridge and the arrival of a mantle plume around 615 Ma. This could be a direct, deep-time analog of the opening of the Neo-Tethys Ocean in the late Paleozoic.


2014 ◽  
Vol 41 (4) ◽  
pp. 483 ◽  
Author(s):  
Leslie R. Fyffe

Recently gathered stratigraphic and U–Pb geochronological data indicate that the pre-Triassic rocks of the Grand Manan Terrane on the eastern side of Grand Manan Island can be divided into: (1) Middle Neoproterozoic (late Cryogenian) quartzose and carbonate sedimentary sequences (The Thoroughfare and Kent Island formations); (2) a Late Neoproterozoic (early Ediacaran) volcanic-arc sequence (Ingalls Head Formation); and (3) Late Neoproterozioc (mid- Ediacaran) to earliest Cambrian (early Terreneuvian) sedimentary and volcanic-arc sequences (Great Duck Island, Flagg Cove, Ross Island, North Head, Priest Cove, and Long Pond Bay formations). A comparison to Precambrian terranes on the New Brunswick mainland (Brookville and New River terranes) and in adjacent Maine (Islesboro Terrane) suggests that the sedimentary and volcanic sequences of the Grand Manan Terrane were deposited on the continental margin of a Precambrian ocean basin that opened during the breakup of Rodinia in the Middle Neoproterozoic (Cryogenian) and closed by the Early Cambrian (Terreneuvian) with the final assembling of Gondwana. Rifting associated with the initial opening of the Paleozoic Iapetus Ocean began in the Late Neoproterozoic (late Ediacaran) and so overlapped in time with the closing of the Precambrian Gondwanan ocean. The southeastern margin of the Iapetus Ocean is defined by thick sequences of quartz-rich Cambrian sediments (within the St. Croix and Miramichi terranes of New Brunswick) that were largely derived from recycling of Precambrian passive-margin sedimentary rocks preserved in the Grand Manan and Brookville terranes of New Brunswick and in the Islesboro Terrane of Maine. These Precambrian terranes are interpreted to represent dextrally displaced basement remnants of the Gondwanan continental margin of Iapetus, consistent with the model of a two-sided Appalachian system proposed by Hank Williams in 1964 based on his work in Newfoundland.SOMMAIREDes données stratigraphiques et géochronologiques U–Pb obtenues récemment indiquent que les roches prétriasiques du terrane de Grand Manan du côté est de l’île Grand Manan peuvent être répartis en: 1) séquences sédimentaires quartzeuses et carbonatées du Néoprotérozoïque moyen (Cryogénien tardif) (formations de Thoroughfare et de Kent Island); 2) séquence d’arc volcanique du Néoprotérozoïque tardif (Édiacarien précoce) (formation d’Ingalls Head); 3) séquences sédimentaires et d’arc volcanique du Néoprotérozoïque tardif (milieu de l’Édiacarien) au tout début du Cambrien (Terreneuvien précoce) (formations de Great Duck Island, Flagg Cove, Ross Island, North Head, Priest Cove et Long Pond Bay). Une comparaison avec des terranes du Précambrien dans la partie continentale du Nouveau-Brunswick (terranes de Brookville et New River) et dans le Maine adjacent (terrane d’Islesboro) semble indiquer que les séquences sédimentaires et volcaniques du terrane de Grand Manan se sont déposées sur la marge continentale d’un bassin océanique précambrien qui s’est ouvert durant la fracturation de la Rodinia au Néoprotérozoïque moyen (Cryogénien) et s’est fermé au Cambrien précoce (Terreneuvien) avec l’assemblage final du Gondwana. La distension continentale associée à l’ouverture initiale de l’océan Iapetus au Paléozoïque a commencé au Néoprotérozoïque tardif (Édiacarien tardif) et a donc partiellement coïncidé avec la fermeture de l’océan précambrien du Gondwana. La marge sud-est de l’océan Iapetus est définie par d’épaisses séquences de sédiments cambriens riches en quartz (dans les terranes de St. Croix et de Miramichi du Nouveau-Brunswick) issus en grande partie du recyclage de roches sédimentaires de la marge continentale passive du Précambrien préservées dans les terranes de Grand Manan et de Brookville au Nouveau-Brunswick et dans le terrane d’Islesboro dans le Maine. Ces terranes précambriens sont interprétés comme la représentation de vestiges, ayant subi un déplacement dextre, du socle de la marge continentale gondwanienne de l’océan Iapetus, ce qui concorde avec le modèle d’un système appalachien à deux côtés proposé par Hank Williams en 1964 sur la base de ses travaux à Terre-Neuve. 


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hans Jørgen Kjøll ◽  
Olivier Galland ◽  
Loic Labrousse ◽  
Torgeir B. Andersen

<p>Dykes are the main magma transport pathways through the Earth’s crust and, in volcanic rifts, they are considered the main mechanism to accommodate tectonic extension. Most models consider dykes as hydro-fractures propagating as brittle tensile, mode I cracks opening perpendicular to the least principal stress. This implies that dykes emplaced in rifts are expected to be sub-vertical and accommodate crustal extension. Here we present detailed field observations of a well-exposed dyke swarm that formed near the brittle-ductile transition at a magma-rich rifted margin during opening of the Iapetus Ocean. It was related to a ca 600 million year-old large igneous province. Our observations show that dykes were not systematically emplaced by purely brittle deformation and that dyke orientation may differ from the typical mode 1 pattern. Distinct dyke morphologies related to different emplacement mechanisms have been recognized including: 1) Brittle dykes that exhibit straight contacts with the host rock, sharp tips, and en-echelon segments with bridges exhibiting angular fragments; 2) Brittle-ductile dykes with undulating contacts, rounded tips, folding of the host rock and contemporaneous brittle and ductile features; 3) Ductile “dykes” with rounded shapes and mingling between partially molten host rock and the intruding mafic magma. The brittle dykes exhibit two distinct orientations separated by ~30° that are mutually cross-cutting, demonstrating that the dyke swam did not consist of only vertical sheets oriented perpendicular to regional extension, as expected in rifts. By using the host-rock layers as markers, a kinematic restoration to quantify the average strain accommodating the emplacement of the dyke complex was performed. This strain estimate shows that the dyke swarm accommodated >100% horizontal extension, but also 27% vertical thickening. This suggests that the magma influx rate was higher than the tectonic stretching rate, which imply that magma was emplaced forcefully, as supported by field observations of the host-rock deformation. Finally, observations of typical “brittle” dykes that were subsequently deformed by ductile mechanisms as well as dykes that were emplaced by purely ductile mechanisms suggest that the fast emplacement of the dyke swarm triggered a rapid shallowing of the brittle-ductile transition. The abrupt dyke emplacement and associated heating resulted in weakening of the crust that probably facilitated the continental break-up, which culminated with opening of the Iapetus Ocean.</p>


1998 ◽  
Vol 106 (5) ◽  
pp. 565-574 ◽  
Author(s):  
B. Bingen ◽  
D. Demaiffe ◽  
O. van Breemen

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Boris Robert ◽  
Mathew Domeier ◽  
Johannes Jakob

<p><span>The late Neoproterozoic is a time interval of dramatic changes affecting the biosphere, the cryosphere and the lithosphere, including the final disaggregation of the supercontinent Rodinia and the formation of Gondwana. The Iapetus Ocean opened during the breakup of Rodinia, i.e. resulting from the separation of the three major continental blocks: Laurentia, Baltica and Amazonia. Protracted continental extension to rifting from 750 to 530 Ma is observed along the involved continental margins and may indicate several ocean openings in addition to the Iapetus Ocean. Breakup timing is still much debated in the literature, as it remains unclear how to best interpret the fragmentary geological record along the rifted margins, and because only few reliable paleomagnetic data are available for this period of time. Three distinct times for the breakup are proposed for Laurentia and Amazonia: at (1) 750-700 Ma, (2) 615-570 Ma and (3) 550-530 Ma. Various terranes are also involved in the opening of the Iapetus Ocean and may have drifted along with or independently of Amazonia.</span></p><p><span>In this study, we reviewed the geological observations of each of the involved margins and the available paleomagnetic data from 750 to 520 Ma to test these scenarios. Paleomagnetic data from Laurentia and Amazonia-West Africa constrain the breakup age to occur before 575 Ma, discarding the possibility of a late Ediacaran/Early Cambrian opening. Geological observations, better preserved in Laurentia and Baltica, indicate two main phases of (attempted) continental rifting, from 750 to 680 Ma and from 615 to 550 Ma. The second phase is usually interpreted as leading to the breakup of Laurentia, Amazonia and Baltica, as in scenarios (2) and (3). Nevertheless, it cannot easily explain (i) the absence of the Central Iapetus Magmatic Province in West Amazonia, (ii) the dynamics of accreted terranes now observed in South America and (iii) the distinct late Neoproterozoic detrital zircon age population in Phanerozoic sediments along West Amazonia (which are moreover absent in East Laurentia). These observations are better explained by a model wherein Laurentia and Amazonia broke apart during the first rifting phase around 750-680 Ma. In this scenario, the second phase of rifting (615-550 Ma) leads, in the west, to drifting of small terranes southward and toward Amazonia, and in the east, to the final breakup between Laurentia and Baltica.</span></p>


1989 ◽  
Vol 126 (1) ◽  
pp. 19-27 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. Wilde ◽  
M. S. Quinby-Hunt ◽  
W. B. N. Berry ◽  
C. J. Orth

AbstractHigh concentrations of vanadium, molybdenum, uranium, arsenic, antimony with low concentrations of manganese, iron and cobalt heretofore restricted to Dictyonema flabelliforme-bearing Tremadoc black shales in Balto-Scandia, have been found in coeval black shales in the Saint John, New Brunswick area. Prior palaeogeographic reconstructions place these areas about 400 km. apart in high southern latitudes in the Iapetus Ocean, with New Brunswick in proximity to Avalonia (southeastern Newfoundland). These geochemical similarities are not found in coeval Tremadoc black shales of Bolivia, New York, Quebec, Wales, and Belgium. Palaeo-oceanographic reconstructions of Iapetus support the proximity of Balto-Scandia and the Saint John area during the early Tremadoc and Gee'sx (1981) suggestion that the signature is a feature of eastern Iapetus. Furthermore, first-order modelling of the major surface currents and related primary productivity in the Tremadoc Iapetus Ocean explain the apparent wide latitudinal range of D. flabelliforme (Fortey, 1984) and the anomalous trace metal content of certain black shales of that time. Variations in the elemental content of these black shales is produced by oceanographic and geologic conditions unique to the geographic site. The distinctive Balto-Scandic geochemical signature resulted from the coincidence of anoxic waters transgressing the shelf at latitudes of high organic productivity at the polar Ekman planetary divergence. This produces the conditions for concentrations of V, U, and Mo in the shales. Metal enriched anoxic bottom waters produced by leaching of volcanics or through hydrothermal activity may be the source of the other enhanced signature elements such as As and Sb. The absence of this geochemical signature in younger non-D. flabelliforme Tremadoc and later black shales in Balto-Scandia and other areas suggests that the closing of Iapetus moved the depositional sites into less productive oceanic areas.


2020 ◽  
pp. SP503-2020-79 ◽  
Author(s):  
Arild Andresen

AbstractLithostratigraphic and structural data from the Early Paleozoic Hardangervidda Group in southern Norway indicate that SW Baltica was affected several hundred kilometres NE of the inferred collision zone with Avalonia (Thor Suture). The first sign of plate interaction was the deposition of a 50–60 m-thick quartz arenite (Holberg Formation) of Floian/Dapingian age in an otherwise mud- and carbonate-dominated shelf. An overlying 5–6 m-thick marble unit of Dapingian–Darriwilian age (‘Orthoceratite Limestone’) marks a change into greenish-grey, calcareous phyllite, locally with beds of impure marble and poorly sorted metasandstone (Solnut Formation).A series of décollement folds (D2 structures) with axes orientated NW–SE (cross-folds) which superimposed a thin-skinned fold thrust with a NE–SW trend (D1 structures) are interpreted as having developed during the progressive underthrusting of Baltica underneath Avalonia. Support for this model is seen in detrital zircon populations: with the Holberg and underlying formations having a Baltican signature, in contrast to the overlying Solnut Formation with a peri-Gondwana signature, including a distinct Late Neoproterozoic zircon population. It is further speculated that the c. 471–458 Ma Garborg eclogite and surrounding paragneisses in the Stavanger area are related to the suture zone between Baltica and Avalonia rather than being related to the Iapetus Ocean and Laurentia, as generally thought.


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