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The margins of Avalonia
During Cambrian and earliest Ordovician times, Avalonia was an area forming an integral part of the huge Gondwanan continent, probably along the northern margin of Amazonia, until in early Ordovician (late Arenig or Llanvirn) time it split off from Gondwana, leaving a widening Rheic Ocean to its sou...
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Published in: | Geological magazine 1997-09, Vol.134 (5), p.627-636 |
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Main Authors: | , , |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Subjects: | |
Citations: | Items that cite this one |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | During Cambrian and earliest Ordovician times, Avalonia was an
area
forming an integral part
of the huge Gondwanan continent, probably along the northern margin of
Amazonia, until in early
Ordovician (late Arenig or Llanvirn) time it split off from Gondwana, leaving
a widening Rheic Ocean to its
south. Today, its southern margin with Gondwana extends northeast from
east of
Cape Cod, Massachusetts,
through Nova Scotia north of the Meguma terrane, and thence below sea level
to the south of
Newfoundland. On the eastern side of the present Atlantic, the southern
margin
may separate southwest
Portugal from the rest of the Iberian Peninsula; it can be traced eastwards
with more certainty from the south
Cornwall nappes to a line separating the Northern Phyllite Belt (on the
southern
margin of the
Rhenohercynian terrane) and the Mid-German Crystalline High. There is no
certain evidence of Avalonian
crust to the northeast of the Elbe Line. The northern margin of Avalonia
extends westwards from south of
Denmark to the British Isles, where it merges with the Iapetus Ocean suture
between Scotland and England.
Traced westwards, it crosses Ireland and reappears in northern Newfoundland
to
the east of New World
Island, where it may follow the trace of the Dog Bay Line and the Cape
Ray Fault.
Recent work suggests
that the northern margin of Avalonia may clip the northern tip of Cape
Breton Island in Nova Scotia, and
then enter the North American mainland at the Bay of Chaleur; it may then
be
traced from north and west of
the Popelogan and Bronson Hill arcs to Long Island Sound near Newhaven,
Connecticut. The Cambrian to
Devonian faunas reflect the history of Avalonia: initially they were purely
Gondwanan but, as Ordovician
time proceeded, more genera crossed firstly the Tornquist Ocean as it narrowed
between Avalonia and
Baltica to close in latest Ordovician and early Silurian times, and secondly
the Iapetus Ocean, so that by the
early Silurian most of the benthic shelly faunas, apart from the ostracods,
were the same round the adjacent margins of all three palaeocontinents. |
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ISSN: | 0016-7568 1469-5081 |
DOI: | 10.1017/S0016756897007425 |