In the Iberian Massif, the Ollo de Sapo ('toad eye') magmatism has long been recognized as an enigmatic Furongian-Early Ordovician (495-470 Ma) assemblage of felsic (sub-)volcanic and plutonic rocks. The main exposures of this event crop out along the core of a 600 km long antiform fringing the northeastern edge of the Central Iberian Zone (Fig. 1A). Penecontemporaneous felsic byproducts locally occur in the neighbouring Ossa-Morena Zone and the Armorican and Occitan domains, reflecting the onset of a large igneous province (LIP) of ca 200 000 km 3 (García-Arias et al. 2018). The Ollo de Sapo magmatic event is also contemporaneous with the development of the so-called Toledanian Phase and gap, which place upper Tremadocian-Floian rocks overlapping with the inherited palaeorelief of tilted Ediacaran-Cambrian blocks. Their unconformable contact, ranging from paraconformities to angular discordances, involves a stratigraphic gap of ca 22 m.y. This unconformity can be correlated with the 'Furongian gap' of the Ossa-Morena Zone and the Anti-Atlas of Morocco, and the Norman gap of the Central and North Armorican domains (Álvaro et al. 2021). The Toledanian Phase, however, is absent in the most proximal sector of the Iberian margin, i.e. the West Asturian-Leonese and Cantabrian zones, and their lateral prolongations into the Sierra de la Demanda and Iberian Chains (Fig. 1A, B). In the latter, a continuous and conformable Furongian-Lower Ordovician transition has traditionally been documented, unaffected by the Toledanian uplift and erosion. The Furongian-Tremadocian trilobite, echinoderm and brachiopod assemblages of the western Iberian Chain are updated and summarized in this short communication.
Results and discussionThe Iberian Chains, located in the NE of the Iberian Peninsula (Fig. 1A, B), represent a lateral prolongation of the West Asturian-Leonese and Cantabrian zones. There, the Furongian-Lower Ordovician strata consist of successive alternations of shale-and sandstone-dominated sedimentary units, and comprise, from bottom to top, the Valtorres Formation (Acón Group), the Valconchán, Borrachón, Dere and Santed formations (Ateca Group, broadly coinciding with the 'Iberian Series ' of Schmitz 1971 andJosopait 1972), and the Armorican Quartzite Formation (Fig. 1C).The Valtorres Formation, 200-350 m thick, consists of monotonous green shales, locally punctuated by sandstone interbeds and silica concretions. Towards its top, there is a gradual increase in the thickness and abundance of sandstone interbeds.