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Journal ArticleDOI

The Early Permian Thysanophyllum coral belt: Another clue to Permian plate-tectonic reconstructions

TLDR
Early Permian species of the related massive coral genera Thysanophyllum, Stylastraea, and Protowentzelella are restricted geographically to a narrow belt stretching discontinuously from the southern Ural Mountains to Texas by way of Vestspitsbergen, Canadian Arctic Islands, and the western Cordillera ( British Columbia and the Basin and Range of Idaho, Utah, Nevada, Arizona, and California) as discussed by the authors.
Abstract
Early Permian species of the related massive coral genera Thysanophyllum , Stylastraea , and Protowentzelella are restricted geographically to a narrow belt stretching discontinuously from the southern Ural Mountains to Texas by way of Vestspitsbergen, Canadian Arctic Islands, and the western Cordillera (British Columbia and the Basin and Range of Idaho, Utah, Nevada, Arizona, and California). In addition, limited data suggest that this belt may have extended as far south as Peru. This coral belt developed at low and intermediate latitudes during Early Permian time along the northwestern and western margins of the Pangaean supercontinent. Land, a very wide Paleopacific Ocean, and temperature barriers prevented these tropical to subtropical, shallow-water corals from invading similar warm-water environments in the Tethys Ocean on the opposite coast of Pangaea, where faunas including different types of massive corals developed. Today, the Thysanophyllum association is represented in several geosynclinal belts which in the past have been difficult to relate to one another. This coral belt, therefore, may constitute an important key for understanding the relationships between several of these great belts of sediment accumulation and in locating the position of Permian continental margins and interpreting some subsequent plate-margin tectonic events.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Growth and demise of Permian biogenic chert along northwest Pangea: evidence for end-Permian collapse of thermohaline circulation

TL;DR: The Permian Chert Event (PCE) was a 30 Ma long episode of unusual chert accumulation along the northwest margin of Pangea, and possibly worldwide as mentioned in this paper, which coincides with a maximum flooding event, the ending of highfrequency/high-amplitude shelf cyclicity, the onset of massive biogenic silica deposition in deep-water distal areas, and a long-term shift from warm-to cool-water carbonate sedimentation in shallow-water proximal areas.
Journal ArticleDOI

Permian and Triassic rocks of the Mojave Desert and their implications for timing and mechanisms of continental truncation

J. Douglas Walker
- 01 Jun 1988 - 
TL;DR: In this paper, a left-lateral strike-slip fault zone formed across the Antler orogenic belt, the Cordilleran miogeocline, and the more cratonal character Mojave Desert.
Journal ArticleDOI

Paleozoic and Mesozoic Evolution of East-Central California

TL;DR: In this article, it was shown that sedimentation did not keep pace with subsidence, resulting in backstepping of a series of successive carbonate platforms throughout the early and middle Paleozoic.
Journal ArticleDOI

Carboniferous North Atlantic palaeogeography: stratigraphic evidence for rifting, not megashear or subduction

TL;DR: Three theories have been proposed for the origin of Carboniferous basins in Britain: megashear, tension from Rheic Ocean subduction; tension from rifting of the North Atlantic as mentioned in this paper.
Journal ArticleDOI

Upper carboniferous to upper permian 13C-enriched primary carbonates in the sverdrup basin, Canadian arctic: Comparisons to coeval Western North American Ocean Margins

TL;DR: Carbon isotopes analyses performed on more than 250 limestone samples from thirteen late Paleozoic autochthonous formations of western and Arctic Canada demonstrate that: (1) For a given locality, the δ13C-values are uniform and there is no temporal increase in ǫ13C during the whole Late Carboniferous (Pennsylvanian), Early Permian and basal Late permian (latest Permians) strata being absent) as discussed by the authors.
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