Reorganization of Northern Peri-Gondwanan Terranes at Cambrian–Ordovician Times: Insights from the Detrital Zircon Record of the Ossa-Morena Zone (SW Iberian Massif)
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Accotto, Cristina; Azor Pérez, Antonio; Martínez Poyatos, David Jesús; González Lodeiro, FranciscoEditorial
GeoScience World
Date
2022-12-19Referencia bibliográfica
Cristina Accotto... [et al.]. Reorganization of Northern Peri-Gondwanan Terranes at Cambrian–Ordovician Times: Insights from the Detrital Zircon Record of the Ossa-Morena Zone (SW Iberian Massif). Lithosphere 2022;; 2022 (1): 6187518. doi: [https://doi.org/10.2113/2022/6187518]
Sponsorship
Consejeria de Transformacion Economica, Industria, Conocimiento y Universidades de la Junta de Andalucia P20_00063 PY20-01387; Ministry of Science and Innovation, Spain (MICINN) Spanish Government PID2020-118822GB-I00 PID2020-119651RB-I00Abstract
The Ossa-Morena Zone constitutes a fringe Gondwana-related terrane all along the Paleozoic. This continental block has been
classically interpreted as being attached to a portion of the northern Gondwanan margin located close to the West African
Craton. We report here the results of U-Pb dating on detrital zircon grains from 15 metasedimentary rocks collected in two
well-exposed and well-dated Cambrian sections (Córdoba and Zafra) of the Ossa-Morena Zone. The studied samples show a
dominant late Tonian-Ediacaran population peaked at c. 600 Ma. Secondary populations are Rhyacian-early Orosirian and late
Orosirian-Statherian in age, with maxima at c. 2.1 and 1.9 Ga. Minor detrital zircon populations are Mesoarchean-early
Siderian in age, with peaks between c. 3.05 and 2.45 Ga. Most of the studied samples lack a Stenian-early Tonian population,
except for two of them with a minor peak at c. 1 Ga. Our results corroborate previous studies that locate the Ossa-Morena
Zone close to the West African Craton and/or the Tuareg Shield (i.e., in a western position with respect to other Variscan
zones of the Iberian Massif) at the onset of the rifting stage that opened the Rheic Ocean. Nevertheless, the absence of a
significant Stenian-early Tonian population in the Cambrian Ossa-Morena rocks contrasts with the reported results on middle
Ordovician-Lower Devonian rocks of this zone, which systematically contain an important population with a peak at c. 1 Ga.
We relate this change to the latest Ediacaran-early Ordovician paleogeographic/paleotectonic evolution of the Ossa-Morena
Zone, which might have recorded a significant eastward displacement, together with a reorganization of the drainage systems.
Thus, the vanishing stages of the Cadomian orogeny could have translated eastward the Ossa-Morena Zone terrane at latest
Ediacaran-earliest Cambrian time due to change in plate kinematics from subduction to right-lateral shearing. This translation
would have shifted the Ossa-Morena Zone from an Ediacaran location close to the West African Craton to a Cambrian
position close to the Tuareg Shield. Finally, the rift-to-drift transition occurred at late Cambrian-early Ordovician time along
the northern Gondwanan margin would have reorganized the drainage systems, facilitating sediment supply from an eastern
source with abundant Stenian-early Tonian detrital zircon grains, probably the Saharan Metacraton.