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http://hdl.handle.net/10174/2976
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Title: | Variscan intra-orogenic extensional tectonics in the Ossa–Morena |
Authors: | Pereira, M. Francisco |
Editors: | Murphy, Bredan Keppie, J.Duncan Hynes, A.J. |
Issue Date: | 2009 |
Abstract: | Following a Middle–Late Devonian (c. 390–360 Ma) phase of crustal shortening and
mountain building, continental extension and onset of high-medium-grade metamorphic terrains
occurred in the SW Iberian Massif during the Visean (c. 345–326 Ma). The E ´ vora–Aracena–
Lora del Rı´o metamorphic belt extends along the Ossa–Morena Zone southern margin from
south Portugal through the south of Spain, a distance of 250 km. This major structural domain is
characterized by local development of high-temperature–low-pressure metamorphism (c. 345–
335 Ma) that reached high amphibolite to granulite facies. These high-medium-grade metamorphic
terrains consist of strongly sheared Ediacaran and Cambrian–early Ordovician (c. 600–480 Ma)
protoliths. The dominant structure is a widespread steeply-dipping foliation with a gently-plunging
stretching lineation generally oriented parallel to the fold axes. Despite of the wrench nature of this
collisional orogen, kinematic indicators of left-lateral shearing are locally compatible with an
oblique component of extension. These extensional transcurrent movements associated with
pervasive mylonitic foliation (c. 345–335 Ma) explain the exhumation of scarce occurrences of
eclogites (c. 370 Ma). Mafic-intermediate plutonic and hypabyssal rocks (c. 355–320 Ma),
mainly I-type high-K calc-alkaline diorites, tonalites, granodiorites, gabbros and peraluminous
biotite granites, are associated with these metamorphic terrains. Volcanic rocks of the same chemical
composition and age are preserved in Tournaisian–Visean (c. 350–335 Ma) marine basins
dominated by detrital sequences with local development of syn-sedimentary gravitational collapse
structures. This study, supported by newU–Pb zircon dating, demonstrates the importance of intraorogenic
transtension in the Gondwana margin during the Early Carboniferous when the Rheic
ocean between Laurussia and Gondwana closed, forming the Appalachian and Variscan mountains. |
URI: | http://hdl.handle.net/10174/2976 |
Type: | article |
Appears in Collections: | GEO - Publicações - Artigos em Revistas Internacionais Com Arbitragem Científica
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