Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item:
http://hdl.handle.net/10174/22539
|
Title: | Detrital provenance of the Upper Triassic siliciclastic rocks from southwest Iberia: a review |
Authors: | Pereira, Manuel Francisco Gama, Cristina |
Keywords: | Upper Triassic continental basins Sedimentary sources U–Pb zircon geochronology Pangaea Iberia |
Issue Date: | 2017 |
Publisher: | Springer |
Citation: | Pereira, M.F., Gama, C. (2017).Detrital provenance of the Upper Triassic siliciclastic rocks
from southwest Iberia: a review. Journal of Iberian Geology 43(3): 379-393. |
Abstract: | In southwestern Iberia the Upper Triassic
successions of Lusitanian, Alentejo and Algarve basins
records the fragmentation of Pangaea in Permian–Triassic
during which the paleogeography of Iberia was dominated
by a series of coalescing, alluvial–deltaic wedges and axial
braided rivers.
In this study, we discuss the potential sediment
sources of the Lusitanian, Alentejo and Algarve basins
based on detrital zircon-age spectra, suggesting that Iberia
occupied a central position Iberia in Pangaea during late
Triassic.
Conventional sedimentary petrography and
paleocurrent measurements of previous works was combined
with recently published detrital zircon U–Pb
geochronology of the Upper Triassic siliciclastic rocks of
southwest Iberia to shed light on the detrital provenance
record.
Zircon age populations found in the Upper Triassic
strata of the Lusitanian, Alentejo and Algarve basins is
dominated by Neoproterozoic (33–76%) and Paleoproterozoic
(12–15%) grains. The most important differences
are the dominance of Devonian–Carboniferous (33%) zircon in the Alentejo basin and the greater representativeness
of Permian–Carboniferous (6%) zircon in the
Lusitanian basin.
The deposition in these Upper Triassic basins
of Portugal is marked by variability in sedimentary sources,
involving the denudation and local-scale directions of
sediment transport from the Iberian basement with possible
additional supplies derived from outside present-day Iberia.
The Upper Triassic successions evolved separately with the
detrital transport being probably controlled by local drainage
systems, and occupying a central position in Pangaea
just before the opening of the Central Atlantic Ocean. |
URI: | http://hdl.handle.net/10174/22539 |
Type: | article |
Appears in Collections: | GEO - Publicações - Artigos em Revistas Internacionais Com Arbitragem Científica
|
Items in DSpace are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.
|