Search results for "Massif"

showing 10 items of 112 documents

Serbo-Macedonian revisited: A Silurian basement terrane from northern Gondwana in the Internal Hellenides, Greece

2009

Abstract New geochronological and geochemical data on basement orthogneisses from the Vertiskos Unit of the Serbo-Macedonian Massif (SMM), Internal Hellenides, northern Greece, are used in order to constrain the pre-Alpine tectonic history of the basement units in the metamorphic hinterland of the Hellenides. The prevailing rock types in the Vertiskos crystalline basement are coarse-grained biotite augengneisses with subordinate leucocratic muscovite gneisses and two-mica gneisses. Zircon Pb–Pb and U–Pb ages on 20 samples range from 425.9 ± 4.2 Ma to 443.4 ± 5.5 Ma with a mean of 432.2 ± 3.2 Ma and are interpreted as primary crystallisation ages of the basement granites on the basis of the …

geographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryPaleozoicContinental crustGeochemistryMassifGondwanaGeophysicsBasement (geology)Alpine orogenyPetrologyGeologyEarth-Surface ProcessesZirconTerraneTectonophysics
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A fault-related coalification anomaly in the Blanzy-Montceau Coal Basin (Massif Central, France)

1997

Abstract The Stephanian intramontane Blanzy-Montceau Coal Basin is situated along a Variscan fault complex bordering the Upper Paleozoic Blanzy-Le Creusot-Bert graben. The deposition of coal-bearing strata was controlled by a complex of early faults known as the “Faille de Bordure” (FB, Border Fault). Another complex of Permian faults known as the “Faille de l'Est” (FE, Eastern Fault) is situated along the more central part of the coal basin. Coalification in the basin follows three main trends: (1) Increasing rank from upper to lower coal seams in accordance with a general vertical trend (Hilt, 1873). The gradient of volatile matter is higher than normal, ranging from 3% to I I% Vdaf per 1…

geographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryPaleozoicPermianLithologyStratigraphyGeochemistryGeologyGeophysicsMassifFault (geology)Structural basinGrabenTectonicsFuel TechnologyEconomic GeologyGeologyInternational Journal of Coal Geology
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Palaeozoic arc magmatism in the Central Asian Orogenic Belt of Kazakhstan: SHRIMP zircon ages and whole-rock Nd isotopic systematics

2008

Abstract Early Palaeozoic tonalite to granodiorite intrusions in northern Kazakhstan are associated with lode gold mineralization and have SHRIMP zircon ages of 457.3 ± 6.6 Ma (Aksu), 452.9 ± 5.6 Ma and 447.4 ± 5.4 Ma (both Zholymbet). The Stepnyak intrusion contains large xenoliths with an age of 480.6 ± 5.0 Ma. One early Palaeozoic zircon from a porphyritic diorite at Stepnyak has a core with a near-concordant 207Pb/206Pb age of 3888 ± 1.5 Ma, whereas other xenocrystic grains are between 983 and 2698 Ma old. The early Archaean age is probably inherited from unexposed basement of the Kokchetav Massif and represents the oldest crustal material so far known from the Asian continent. It appea…

geographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryPaleozoicProterozoicCrustal recyclingGeochemistryGeologyMassifDioriteContinental arcIsland arcGeologyEarth-Surface ProcessesZirconJournal of Asian Earth Sciences
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Stages in the compaction of peat; examples from the Stephanian and Permian of the Massif Central, France

1987

Thick coal seams in the intramontane basins of the Massif Central allow a detailed study of peat/coal compaction. Three stages of compaction can be detected. Stage 1—occurred during the deposition of the peat. Coal beds which thicken and dip away from penecontemporaneous sandstones suggest rapid compaction. Stage 2—compaction of peat related to overburden pressure in some cases resulted in the formation of lakes over peat beds. The thickness of the lacustrine deposits may give an indication of the amount of compaction that took place. One possibility is that the early compaction was related to the progradation of siliciclastics over the peat. Stage 3—occurred after the organic sediment achi…

geographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryPeatPermianbusiness.industryGeochemistryCompactionCoal miningGeologyMassifClastic rockCoalProgradationbusinessGeomorphologyGeologyJournal of the Geological Society
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The carbonates of the Permian Lakes of North Massif central, France

1992

During the Permian, large fluvio-lacustrine basins occurred within the West European Hercynian chain. The deposits were mainly detrital (conglomerates, sandstones and pelites). The two studied sites, Couy borehole and Aumance basin contain several dolomitic beds alternating with pelites containing Ostracods. The carbonate layers constitute various dolomitized facies with dolosparite, laminated and bituminous dolomites, oolites, oncolites and stromatolites, and pedological nodules. Microfacies are varied. The dolomite crystals can be either isolated rhombs scattered in pelites or rhombs and xenomorphic crystals cementing sandstones; in dolomicrites, dolomicrosparites and dolosparites, crysta…

geographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryPermianDolomiteMassifMineral resource classificationPaleontologychemistry.chemical_compoundchemistryGeochemistry and PetrologyFaciesPeliteCarbonateGeologyOncoliteCarbonates and Evaporites
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Late Proterozoic and Silurian basement units within the Serbo-Macedonian Massif, northern Greece: the significance of terrane accretion in the Hellen…

2006

geographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryProterozoicGeochemistryMacedonianGeologyOcean EngineeringMassiflanguage.human_languageBasement (geology)languagePetrologyGeologyWater Science and TechnologyTerraneGeological Society, London, Special Publications
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Os isotopes and highly siderophile elements (HSE) in the Ligurian Ophiolites, Italy.

2000

The Os isotopic and highly siderophile element (HSE) concentration systematics of the upper mantle have been the focus of much recent interest. However, little systematic study has addressed the combined HSE and Os isotopes in mantle rocks from MOR ophiolites. The Ligurian ophiolites in northern Italy represent an important class of ophiolites representing, like Zabargad or the Galicia margin, crust with clear ocean ridge affinity floored by older mantle with arguably more continental affinities [Rampone et al., J. Petrol. 36, 18–105, 1995; Rampone et al., Contrib. Mineral. Petrol. 123, 61–67, 1996]. We have studied a suite of 15 geochemically and geologically well characterized mantle peri…

geographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryProterozoicGeochemistryMid-ocean ridgeCrustMassifOphioliteMantle (geology)GeophysicsSpace and Planetary ScienceGeochemistry and PetrologyUltramafic rockTransition zoneEarth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous)Geology
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Internal structures and dating of complex zircons from Meissen Massif monzonites, Saxony

1999

Abstract U–Pb zircon ages were determined for accessory zircons from two monzonites from the Meissen Massif (Northern Bohemian Massif, Germany) by SHRIMP ion microprobe. BSE and CL imaging revealed that the monzonite zircons, showing oscillatory growth zoning, often contain inherited cores. Raman microprobe measurements showed that zoned rims (U 277–1426 ppm, Th 144–910 ppm) are slightly disordered to moderately metamict whereas cores have a wide spectrum of structural states, from well-crystallized to highly metamict. The radionuclide (U+Th) content of cores varies from a few hundred to more than 20,000 ppm. SHRIMP ion probe measurements on zoned rims, interpreted as zircon growth during c…

geographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryProterozoicGeochemistryQuartz monzoniteGeologyMassifMetamictizationGeochemistry and PetrologyCarboniferousMagmaGeologyAmphiboleZirconChemical Geology
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Metamorphism of Precambrian–Palaeozoic schists of the Menderes core series and contact relationships with Proterozoic orthogneisses of the western Çi…

2006

The tectonic setting of the southern Menderes Massif, part of the western Anatolide belt in western Turkey, is characterized by the exhumation of deeper crustal levels onto the upper crust during the Eocene. The lowermost tectonic units of the Menderes Massif are exposed in the Çine Massif, where Proterozoic basement orthogneisses of the Çine nappe are in tectonic contact with Palaeozoic metasedimentary rocks of the Selimiye nappe. In the southern Çine Massif, orthogneiss and metasedimentary rocks are separated by the southerly dipping Selimiye shear zone, preserving top-to-the-S shearing under greenschist facies conditions. In contrast, in the western Çine Massif, the orthogneiss is deform…

geographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryShear (geology)GreenschistMetamorphismGeologyMassifShear zonePetrologyGeologyMetamorphic faciesMyloniteNappeGeological Magazine
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Tectono-Magmatic Evolution, Age and Emplacement of the Agardagh Tes-Chem Ophiolite in Tuva, Central Asia: Crustal Growth by Island arc Accretion

2004

Publisher Summary The Agardagh Tes–Chem ophiolite in Tuva, Central Asia, is part of the Central Asian Mobile Belt which formed during subduction–accretion processes lasting from the early Neoproterozoic to the late Palaeozoic. The Agardagh Tes–Chem ophiolite marks the northwestern border of the Tuva–Mongolian Massif (TMM), which comprises several intrusive and metamorphic complexes. These complexes consist of metatonalites, gneisses, migmatites, amphibolites, marbles, quartzites, low-grade metasedimentary rocks and minor ultramafic lenses, and radiometric ages range between 536 and 464 Ma. Field observations suggest that the southwestern part of the Tes–Chem unit represents the lower to int…

geographygeography.geographical_feature_categorySheeted dyke complexMantle wedgeUltramafic rockGeochemistryIsland arcMassifMigmatiteOphioliteGeologyGneiss
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