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Early Palaeozoic rift‐related magmatism in Variscan Europe: fragmentation of the Armorican Terrane Assemblage
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Citations
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References
2000
Year
Magmatic ProcessMantle Plume ConvectionVolcanologyEngineeringVolcanismPrecambrian GeologyTectonic EvolutionEarth ScienceMesozoic TectonicsMagmatismIgneous PetrogenesisGeologyVariscan EuropeEarly PalaeozoicNw IberiaArmorican Terrane AssemblageTectonicsEarly Palaeozoic BimodalGeochemistryOrogenyPetrology
Early Palaeozoic bimodal rift‐related magmatism is widespread throughout much of the Variscides of Europe. It is traceable from the Polish Sudetes to NW Iberia. Granitic plutonism generally predates Cambro–Ordovician bimodal magmatism. In the N Bohemian Massif this early Palaeozoic granitic plutonism was generated by partial melting of Cadomian basement, whereas contemporaneous alkali granites with a mantle component are typical of the NW Iberian Massif. Silurian‐Devonian mafic magmatism in the N Bohemian Massif, Massif Central and NW Iberian Massif is partly preserved as obducted ophiolites. Compositional diversity displayed by Cambro‐Ordovician mafic magmatism can be accounted for by interaction between a spreading centre and an upwelling mantle plume. This indicates that combined tensional forces and mantle plume convection assisted the early Palaeozoic dispersal of terranes from the N Gondwana margin. Continued fragmentation resulted in development of an archipelago of related terranes separated by a network of seaways and formation of oceanic crust.
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