2012
DOI: 10.1016/j.gr.2012.03.010
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The missing Rheic Ocean magmatic arcs: Provenance analysis of Late Paleozoic sedimentary clastic rocks of SW Iberia

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Cited by 91 publications
(80 citation statements)
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“…A proximal provenance is also supported by several features of the age spectra (Fig. 8), such as: (1) the abundance of Cryogenian to Ediacaran zircon ages, which are very abundant in basement metapelites (Pereira et al, 2012a(Pereira et al, , 2012bBraid et al, 2011;Talavera et al, 2012;Shaw et al, 2014;Pérez-Cáceres et al, 2017); (2) the coincidence of the Paleozoic zircon population with magmatic events in the surrounding areas (Fernández-Suárez et al, 2000;Jesus et al, 2007;Azor et al, 2008;Rosa et al, 2009) and the detrital record of the upper Paleozoic basement rocks (Braid et al, 2011;Dinis et al, 2012;Pereira et al, 2012b;Pérez-Cáceres et al, 2017).…”
Section: Triassic (Early Fragmentation)mentioning
confidence: 71%
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“…A proximal provenance is also supported by several features of the age spectra (Fig. 8), such as: (1) the abundance of Cryogenian to Ediacaran zircon ages, which are very abundant in basement metapelites (Pereira et al, 2012a(Pereira et al, , 2012bBraid et al, 2011;Talavera et al, 2012;Shaw et al, 2014;Pérez-Cáceres et al, 2017); (2) the coincidence of the Paleozoic zircon population with magmatic events in the surrounding areas (Fernández-Suárez et al, 2000;Jesus et al, 2007;Azor et al, 2008;Rosa et al, 2009) and the detrital record of the upper Paleozoic basement rocks (Braid et al, 2011;Dinis et al, 2012;Pereira et al, 2012b;Pérez-Cáceres et al, 2017).…”
Section: Triassic (Early Fragmentation)mentioning
confidence: 71%
“…9). Zircon of Grenvillian age is scarce in the basement rocks that crop out in the vicinity of the studied basins, namely in the OMZ (Linnemann et al, 2008;Fernández-Suárez et al, 2014), in the Schist-Greywacke Complex (Pereira et al, 2012a;Talavera et al, 2012;Fernández-Suárez et al, 2014) and in the Ordovician "Armorican Quarztites" (Pereira et al, 2012a;Shaw et al, 2014), but is common in several Paleozoic units from NW Iberia (Fernández-Suárez et al, 2002;Martínez Catalán et al, 2004;Pastor-Galán et al, 2013;Shaw et al, 2014). The abundant Paleoproterozoic zircon and the occasional Archean zircons are most likely inherited from older Paleozoic to Precambrian Iberian metasedimentary successions that yield peaks of similar ages (Talavera et al, 2012;Pastor-Galán et al, 2013;Shaw et al, 2014;Rodrigues et al, 2015;Pérez-Cáceres et al, 2017).…”
Section: Main Zircon Forming Events and Sourcesmentioning
confidence: 97%
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“…These units are overlain in both limbs of the antiform by a flyschoid sequence which age ranges from the upper Frasnian to the upper Famennian . Various tectonic interpretations have been suggested for the PLD: (i) an accretionary prism in close association with a subduction zone dipping to the north below the Ossa-Morena Zone as a consequence of the Rheic Ocean closure (Munhá et al 1986a;Quesada et al 1994;Pereira et al 2006;Ribeiro et al 2007); (ii) an independent terrane ); (iii) an escaped crustal block that resulted from the Iberia indentation with Laurussia, responsible for the generation of the Ibero-Armorican arc (Braid et al 2011) and, finally, (iv) the infilling of a deep extensional basin between the SW border of the Ossa Morena Zone and the Iberian Pyrite Belt (Pereira et al 2012a). …”
Section: Geologic Settingmentioning
confidence: 99%