2009
DOI: 10.1016/j.crte.2008.12.001
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A review of the pre-Permian geology of the Variscan French Massif Central

Abstract: The Massif Central, like the southern part of the Massif Armoricain, belongs to the North Carboniferous age, correspond to the syn and late orogenic extensional tectonics, respectively. The former is controlled by NW-SE stretching whereas the later is accommodated by a NNE-SSW stretching. These structural and metamorphic events are replaced in a geodynamic evolution model.

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Cited by 223 publications
(234 citation statements)
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“…A large portion of the Eastern French Massif Central is occupied by the Velay Complex, a c. 100 by 100 km migmatite dome (Lagarde et al 1994;Ledru et al 2001). A large volume of peraluminous granite forms its core (Williamson et al 1992;Lagarde et al 1994;Downes et al 1997;Ledru et al 2001), and cuts across the Early Carboniferous nappe stack (Faure et al 2009 and references therein). The Southern Velay area experienced a polymetamorphic evolution during the Variscan orogeny, described as a succession of four major tectono-metamorphic events (Marignac et al 1980;Montel et al 1992).…”
Section: Geological Settingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A large portion of the Eastern French Massif Central is occupied by the Velay Complex, a c. 100 by 100 km migmatite dome (Lagarde et al 1994;Ledru et al 2001). A large volume of peraluminous granite forms its core (Williamson et al 1992;Lagarde et al 1994;Downes et al 1997;Ledru et al 2001), and cuts across the Early Carboniferous nappe stack (Faure et al 2009 and references therein). The Southern Velay area experienced a polymetamorphic evolution during the Variscan orogeny, described as a succession of four major tectono-metamorphic events (Marignac et al 1980;Montel et al 1992).…”
Section: Geological Settingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Devonian subduction was followed by oblique collision of the northern Gondwana margin against Armorica in Famennian -Tournaisian times (Edel, Schulmann, Skrzypek, & Cocherie, 2013;Matte, 2001). The final convergence between the continental blocks was characterized by the development of a wide network of lithospheric strike-slip shear zones, which accommodated the northeastward displacement of Laurussia and Avalonia relative to stable Gondwana from late Visean to Early Permian (Faure, Lardeaux, & Ledru, 2009;Gutiérrez-Alonso et al, 2008;Muttoni, Kent, & Channell, 1996). The pre-Mesozoic basement of north Sardinia is a section of the Variscan orogen equivalent to the Moldanubian domain ( Figure 1) of central Europe (Edel et al, 2013;Matte, 2001;Rossi, Oggiano, & Cocherie, 2009 (Buzzi, Gaggero, & Oggiano, 2008;Casini et al, 2012;Oggiano, Gaggero, Funedda, Buzzi, & Tiepolo, 2010), and a Lower Metamorphic Complex (LMC), made of paragneisses, micaschists, quartzites and subordinate amphibolite boudins (Cappelli et al, 1991;Carmignani et al, 1994).The Visean collisional evolution is testified by exhumation of HP rocks and southward thrusting of UMC onto LMC.…”
Section: Geological Settingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The combination of horizontal shortening and extension with diapiric flow explains the absence of a radial or centrifuge flow pattern and also the fact that the dome bends the vectors of extensional flow. These two features are observed along the axial zones of the Variscan belt, both in the Iberian Massif (this article), the French Massif Central (Malavieille et al 1990;Lagarde et al 1994;Ledru et al 2001;Faure et al 2009), and the German Variscides (Krohe and Eisbacher 1988;Krohe 1998).…”
Section: Tectonic Implications For the Iberian Massif And For Plate Cmentioning
confidence: 67%