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Journal ArticleDOI

The Variscan collage and orogeny (480-290 Ma) and the tectonic definition of the Armorica microplate: a review

P. Matte
- 01 Apr 2001 - 
- Vol. 13, Iss: 2, pp 122-128
TLDR
In this paper, a tectonic approach was used to define the Variscan orogeny by collision of Avalonia plus Armorica with Gondwana, and the Galicia-Southern Brittany suture between the Rheic and the so-called Armorica microplate was defined.
Abstract
The Variscan belt of western Europe is part of a large Palaeozoic mountain system, 1000 km broad and 8000 km long, which extended from the Caucasus to the Appalachian and Ouachita mountains of northern America at the end of the Carboniferous. This system, built between 480 and 250 Ma, resulted from the diachronic collision of two continents: Laurentia–Baltica to the NW and Gondwana to the SE. Between these two continents, small, intermediate continental plates separated by oceanic sutures mainly have been defined (based on palaeomagnetism) as Avalonia and Armorica. They are generally assumed to have been detached from Gondwana during the early Ordovician and docked to Laurentia and Baltica before the Carboniferous collision between Gondwana and Laurentia–Baltica. Palaeomagnetic and palaeobiostratigraphic methods allow two main oceanic basins to be distinguished: the Iapetus ocean between Avalonia and Laurentia and between Laurentia and Baltica, with a lateral branch (Tornquist ocean) between Avalonia and Baltica, and the Rheic ocean between Avalonia and the so-called Armorica microplate. Closure of the Iapetus ocean led to the Caledonian orogeny: a belt resulting from collision between Laurentia and Baltica, and from softer collisions between Avalonia and Laurentia and between Avalonia and Baltica. Closure of the Rheic ocean led to the Variscan orogeny by collision of Avalonia plus Armorica with Gondwana. A tectonic approach allows this scenario to be further refined. Another important oceanic suture is defined: the Galicia–Southern Brittany suture, running through France and Iberia and separating the Armorica microplate into North Armorica and South Armorica. Its closure by northward (or/and westward?) oceanic and then continental subduction led to early Variscan (430–370 Ma) tectonism and metamorphism in the internal parts of the Variscan belt. As no Palaeozoic suture can be detected south of South Armorica, this latter microplate should be considered as part of Gondwana since early Palaeozoic times and during its Palaeozoic north-westward drift. Thus, the name Armorica should be restricted to the microplate included between the Rheic and the Galicia–Southern Brittany sutures.

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Citations
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Phanerozoic polar wander, palaeogeography and dynamics

TL;DR: A significant number of new palaeomagnetic poles have become available since the last time a compilation was made (assembled in 2005, published in 2008) to indicate to us that a new and significantly expanded set of tables with palaeOMagnetic results would be valuable, with results coming from the Gondwana cratonic elements, Laurentia, Baltica/Europe, and Siberia as mentioned in this paper.
Journal ArticleDOI

Phanerozoic geological evolution of Northern and Central Africa: An overview

TL;DR: In a recent paper as discussed by the authors, the principal paleogeographic characteristics of North and Central Africa during the Paleozoic were the permanency of large exposed lands over central Africa, surrounded by northerly and northwesterly dipping pediplanes episodically flooded by epicontinental seas related to the Paleotethys Ocean.
Journal ArticleDOI

The formation of Pangea

TL;DR: In this paper, a global plate tectonic model was developed together with a large geological/geodynamic database, at the Lausanne University, covering the last 600 Ma of the Earth's history.
Journal ArticleDOI

Gondwana from top to base in space and time

TL;DR: Gondwana is reviewed from the unification of its several cratons in the Late Neoproterozoic, through its combination with Laurussia in the Carboniferous to form Pangea and up to its progressive fragmentation in the Mesozoic.
Journal ArticleDOI

Plate tectonics in the late Paleozoic

TL;DR: In this article, a model for the late Paleozoic (410-250 million years ago) is presented, together with a review of the underlying data, which can be used for numerical mantle modeling, and serve as a general framework for understanding late paleozoic tectonics.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Revised World maps and introduction

TL;DR: The authors reviewed the highlights of the 1988 Symposium on Palaeozoic Biogeography and Palaeogeography, and presented a revised set of 20 base maps that incorporate much of the new data presented at the symposium.

Evidence for Life in a Martian Meteorite

TL;DR: The controversial hypothesis that the ALH84001 meteorite contains relics of ancient martian life has spurred new findings, but the question has not yet been resolved as discussed by the authors, but this controversy continues to help define strategies and sharpen tools that will be required for a Mars exploration program focused on the search for life.
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Tectonics and plate tectonics model for the Variscan belt of Europe

Philippe Matte
- 15 Jun 1986 - 
TL;DR: In this article, a plate tectonics model is presented to explain the tectonometamorphic characteristics of the European Variscides and the subsequent complex intracontinental deformation (380-290 Ma).
Journal ArticleDOI

Late Paleozoic strike-slip faulting in southern Europe and northern Africa: Result of a right-lateral shear zone between the Appalachians and the Urals

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors interpreted the late Paleozoic wrench faulting in southern Europe and northern Africa as a right-lateral shear zone induced by the relative motion of two plates, a northern one that includes the Canadian Shield, Greenland, and stable Europe and a southern one that including the African Shield plus an unknown eastern extension.
Journal ArticleDOI

The mid-European segment of the Variscides: tectonostratigraphic units, terrane boundaries and plate tectonic evolution

TL;DR: In this paper, the mid-European segment of the Variscides is a tectonic collage consisting of (from north to south): Avalonia, a Silurian-early Devonian magmatic arc, members of the Armorican Terrane Assemblage (ATA: Franconia, Saxo-Thuringia, Bohemia) and Moldanubia (part of N Gondwana).
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