Cadomia origins: Paired Ediacaran ophiolites from the Iberian Massif, the opening and closure record of peri-Gondwanan basins
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Arenas, Ricardo; Vérard, Christian; Albert, Richard; Rojo Pérez, Esther; Sánchez Martínez, Sonia; Novo Fernández, Irene; Moreno Martín, Diana; Gerdes, Axel; García Casco, Antonio; Díez Fernández, RubénEditorial
Geological Society of London
Fecha
2023Referencia bibliográfica
Published version: Arenas, Ricardo et al. Cadomia origins: Paired Ediacaran ophiolites from the Iberian Massif, the opening and closure record of peri-Gondwanan basins. Geological Society, London, Special Publications Vol. 542, 507-526. https://doi.org/10.1144/SP542-2022-328
Patrocinador
Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (Spain): PID2020-112489-GB-C21, PID2020-112489-GB-C22; Wilhelm and Else Heraeus Foundation; Deutsche ForschungsgemeinschaftResumen
The recent discovery of Ediacaran ophiolites in the SW Iberian Massif has made it
possible to pinpoint the evolution of the Cadomian basement of Europe. The Calzadilla and
Merida ophiolites (gabbroic protoliths dated at c. 600 and 594 Ma, respectively) have
geochemical characteristics typical of supra-subduction zone ophiolites. They are interpreted
as originating during the initial opening of a fore-arc basin with boninitic magmatism
(Calzadilla), followed by the formation of a back-arc basin with arc-tholeiites (Merida).
Widening of the back-arc leads to the rifting and drifting of a section of the active continental
margin (Cadomia). These oceanic domains initiated a rapid contraction, culminating in the
collision of Cadomia with Gondwana (c. 590-540 Ma). The application of a PANALESIS
model to this paleogeographic setting confirms the plausibility of Cadomian rifting and the
likely opening of broad oceanic domains. It also confirms the final collision of Cadomia with
Gondwana, although the synthetic and regional data disagree in the precise chronology of
the convergence and collision of Cadomia with the West Africa Craton. This work shows that
the evolution of the Cadomian basement is much more complex than traditionally
considered.