Southeastern Atlantic Canada, Northwestern Africa, and Continental Drift

The model applies plate-tectonics to explain the geologic evolution of southeastern Atlantic Canada and northwestern Africa. The North Atlantic may have opened and closed several times from the middle Cryptozoic to the present. Closings of the ocean caused collisions between continents and also isla...

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Published in:Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences
Main Author: Schenk, Paul E.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Canadian Science Publishing 1971
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1139/e71-113
http://www.nrcresearchpress.com/doi/pdf/10.1139/e71-113
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spelling crcansciencepubl:10.1139/e71-113 2024-06-23T07:55:04+00:00 Southeastern Atlantic Canada, Northwestern Africa, and Continental Drift Schenk, Paul E. 1971 http://dx.doi.org/10.1139/e71-113 http://www.nrcresearchpress.com/doi/pdf/10.1139/e71-113 en eng Canadian Science Publishing http://www.nrcresearchpress.com/page/about/CorporateTextAndDataMining Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences volume 8, issue 10, page 1218-1251 ISSN 0008-4077 1480-3313 journal-article 1971 crcansciencepubl https://doi.org/10.1139/e71-113 2024-06-13T04:10:53Z The model applies plate-tectonics to explain the geologic evolution of southeastern Atlantic Canada and northwestern Africa. The North Atlantic may have opened and closed several times from the middle Cryptozoic to the present. Closings of the ocean caused collisions between continents and also island arcs. Openings were ragged so that parts of one continent were transposed to the other, and sialic fragments became offshore micro-continents. Africa has progressively lost increments of continental crust to North America.Precambrian blocks of southeastern Atlantic Canada may be remnants of an African shelf. which was crumpled during a billion-year old continental collision (Grenville orogeny). After ragged rifting during the Late Precambrian these fragmentary blocks were carried eastward as micro-continents off Africa. Both early (Danakil Alps of the Red Sea) and late-stage (Canary Islands) recent analogues appear valid. The micro-continents ponded turbidites, which formed rise-complexes off Africa. Continental glaciations in the Late Precambrian and Late Ordovician not only make excellent inter-regional chronostratigraphic units in almost unfossiliferous strata. but also may confirm the African origin of Nova Scotia. Subducting plate-margins increased offshore volcanism and narrowed the Paleozoic Atlantic. Late Paleozoic continental collision again between Africa and North America sandwiched the micro-continent, telescoped the sedimentary/volcanic complexes, and flooded the sutured area with granodiorite. Middle Carboniferous carbonates and sulfates record vestiges of the Paleozoic Atlantic, and mixing of the Euro-African fauna with that of the western Paleozoic Atlantic of the northwestern Appalachians. The Atlantic was closed at least along the latitude of Atlantic Canada and Morocco. During the Mesozoic, an accreting margin uplifted this area, quickened redbed deposition and volcanism, initiated restricted marine sedimentation, and inaugurated the present North Atlantic east of the African remnant of ... Article in Journal/Newspaper North Atlantic Canadian Science Publishing Canada Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences 8 10 1218 1251
institution Open Polar
collection Canadian Science Publishing
op_collection_id crcansciencepubl
language English
description The model applies plate-tectonics to explain the geologic evolution of southeastern Atlantic Canada and northwestern Africa. The North Atlantic may have opened and closed several times from the middle Cryptozoic to the present. Closings of the ocean caused collisions between continents and also island arcs. Openings were ragged so that parts of one continent were transposed to the other, and sialic fragments became offshore micro-continents. Africa has progressively lost increments of continental crust to North America.Precambrian blocks of southeastern Atlantic Canada may be remnants of an African shelf. which was crumpled during a billion-year old continental collision (Grenville orogeny). After ragged rifting during the Late Precambrian these fragmentary blocks were carried eastward as micro-continents off Africa. Both early (Danakil Alps of the Red Sea) and late-stage (Canary Islands) recent analogues appear valid. The micro-continents ponded turbidites, which formed rise-complexes off Africa. Continental glaciations in the Late Precambrian and Late Ordovician not only make excellent inter-regional chronostratigraphic units in almost unfossiliferous strata. but also may confirm the African origin of Nova Scotia. Subducting plate-margins increased offshore volcanism and narrowed the Paleozoic Atlantic. Late Paleozoic continental collision again between Africa and North America sandwiched the micro-continent, telescoped the sedimentary/volcanic complexes, and flooded the sutured area with granodiorite. Middle Carboniferous carbonates and sulfates record vestiges of the Paleozoic Atlantic, and mixing of the Euro-African fauna with that of the western Paleozoic Atlantic of the northwestern Appalachians. The Atlantic was closed at least along the latitude of Atlantic Canada and Morocco. During the Mesozoic, an accreting margin uplifted this area, quickened redbed deposition and volcanism, initiated restricted marine sedimentation, and inaugurated the present North Atlantic east of the African remnant of ...
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Schenk, Paul E.
spellingShingle Schenk, Paul E.
Southeastern Atlantic Canada, Northwestern Africa, and Continental Drift
author_facet Schenk, Paul E.
author_sort Schenk, Paul E.
title Southeastern Atlantic Canada, Northwestern Africa, and Continental Drift
title_short Southeastern Atlantic Canada, Northwestern Africa, and Continental Drift
title_full Southeastern Atlantic Canada, Northwestern Africa, and Continental Drift
title_fullStr Southeastern Atlantic Canada, Northwestern Africa, and Continental Drift
title_full_unstemmed Southeastern Atlantic Canada, Northwestern Africa, and Continental Drift
title_sort southeastern atlantic canada, northwestern africa, and continental drift
publisher Canadian Science Publishing
publishDate 1971
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1139/e71-113
http://www.nrcresearchpress.com/doi/pdf/10.1139/e71-113
geographic Canada
geographic_facet Canada
genre North Atlantic
genre_facet North Atlantic
op_source Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences
volume 8, issue 10, page 1218-1251
ISSN 0008-4077 1480-3313
op_rights http://www.nrcresearchpress.com/page/about/CorporateTextAndDataMining
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1139/e71-113
container_title Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences
container_volume 8
container_issue 10
container_start_page 1218
op_container_end_page 1251
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