The Maritimes Basin of Atlantic Canada: Basin creation and destruction in the collisional zone of Pangea

During the final assembly of Pangea, the Maritimes Basin of Atlantic Canada was tectonically active for ~120 Ma from the mid Devonian to the early Permian, following terrane accretion and ocean closure in the region. The basin’s history records a prolonged period of convergence that post-dated the c...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Gibling, M. R., N. Culshaw, Rygel, M. C., Pascucci, V., Waldron, J. W. F.
Other Authors: Gibling, M.R., Culshaw, N, Rygel, M.C., Waldron, J.W.F, Miall, A., N., Culshaw
Format: Book Part
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11388/219786
https://doi.org/10.1016/B978-0-444-63895-3.00006-1
Description
Summary:During the final assembly of Pangea, the Maritimes Basin of Atlantic Canada was tectonically active for ~120 Ma from the mid Devonian to the early Permian, following terrane accretion and ocean closure in the region. The basin’s history records a prolonged period of convergence that post-dated the collision of Gondwana and Laurussia. The 12 km of basin fill was laid down in suites of periodically connected depocentres, and parts of the region experienced a polycyclic basin history, with repeated subsidence and inversion of fault-bounded depocentres, many associated with strike-slip faults. During two periods in the basin history, sedimentation overstepped fault zones under a regime of thermal subsidence to blanket much of the region. The basin fills are largely continental but include one open-marine interval with evaporite accumulation (Mississippian), as well as restricted-marine intervals, reflecting progressive loss of oceanic connection. Basinal architecture testifies to rapid subsidence against a backdrop of glacioeustatic influence in a paleo-equatorial setting. Volcanisms and intrusions were especially prominent during Devonian to Mississippian convergence, and halokinesis greatly influenced later basin development. A partial analogue for the Maritimes Basin is provided by modern Turkey and environs, situated in the Arabia–Eurasia collision zone, where strike-slip faults and basin formation record continued post-collisional convergence adjacent to the Zagros thrust-belt. Local crustal thickening, delamination of subducting crust, volcanism, extensional zones, and basin creation along crustal-scale faults are prominent in this region. Formed during Africa/Europe collision, the rapidly evolving basins of Paratethys provide a sedimentological analogue for the restricted setting.