Provenance of the Meguma terrane, Nova Scotia: rifted margin of early Paleozoic Gondwana
Citations Over TimeTop 1% of 2009 papers
Abstract
Detrital zircon ages from the lower part of the Late Proterozoic(?) to Middle Cambrian Goldenville Group in the Meguma terrane of Nova Scotia suggest derivation from local sources in the Avalonian and Pan-African orogens on the margins of Early Cambrian Gondwana. Samples from near the top of the group show a broader distribution, including ages back to Archean. The ε Nd data show a corresponding trend, from slightly positive in the lower Goldenville Group to highly negative in the upper Goldenville Group and overlying Upper Cambrian to Lower Ordovician Halifax Group. The trends are consistent with deposition of the lower part of the Meguma succession in a rift, in which uplifted rift-flanks were the main source of the early basin fill, whereas subsequent thermal subsidence of rift margins allowed for more widespread sediment sourcing in younger units. The rift was possibly located between Gondwana and Avalonia, and may have been the locus for separation of Avalonia from Gondwana to form part of the Rheic Ocean.
Related Papers
- → Geodynamic evolution of the European Variscan fold belt: palaeomagnetic and geological constraints(1997)246 cited
- → The Early Paleozoic history of the Cuyania (greater Precordillera) terrane of western Argentina: evidence from geochronology of detrital zircons from Middle Cambrian sandstones(2005)54 cited
- → The Early Palaeozoic geography of Europe(2000)118 cited
- → First report of craniide brachiopods in the Palaeozoic of Iran (Pseudocrania, Ordovician), and Early to Mid‐Ordovician biogeography of the Craniida(2013)9 cited
- → Presidential Address 2005: Where was Britain in the Palaeozoic?(2005)4 cited