The Avalonia microcontinent has diagnostic terminal Ediacaran–Ordovician lithostratigraphy, depositional sequence architecture, and igneous activity that extends for 2000+ km reflecting epeirogeny related to the Avalonian transform fault. Avalonia records an abrupt early Middle Cambrian (late Wuliuan) change from green, purple, or light grey to overlying black, dark grey, and brown facies in platform and off-platform areas (Meguma, North Wales). This change within one trilobite zone marks onset of ca. 26 m.y. of shallow-marine anoxia/strong dysoxia lasting into the Ordovician with Hatch Hill oxygenated mid-water zone (OMZ) onlap onto the shelf. A Bakken model (new, based on the middle Paleozoic Bakken Formation) is applied to shallow-shelf–shoreline organic-rich mud deposition. Erosion of greenish Avalonian depositional sequence (Ads) 7 was followed by Ads 8 tilting, volcanism, debris flows, and bentonite deposition on a cryptic unconformity in SE Newfoundland. The early Middle Cambrian age of the Ads 7–8 boundary is obscured by referring the lower Manuels River Formation and Cristallinium cambriense Zone to the younger Drumian Stage. Ads 8 has thin ashes in coterminous British and North American Avalonia where erosion and subaerial exposure with caliche development preceded onlap of upper Middle or Upper Cambrian Ads 9 black muds and sands. The green–black change emphasizes Avalonian unity; it precludes multiple Avalonian “micro-terranes” or assigning parts of Avalonia to West Gondwana or “Ganderia” (the Little River, Brookville, and Bras d’Or “terranes” are part of the Avalonian marginal platform). Coeval green–black transitions and similar later Cambrian faunas show comparable paleoenvironments in Avalonia and Baltica.
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Research Article|
August 30, 2022
Trans-Avalonian green–black boundary (early Middle Cambrian): transform fault-driven epeirogeny and onset of 26 m.y. of shallow-marine, black mudstone in Avalonia (Rhode Island–Belgium) and Baltica
Ed Landing;
a
New York State Museum, 222 Madison Avenue, Albany, NY 12230, USACorresponding author: Ed Landing (email: [email protected])
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Stephen R. Westrop;
Stephen R. Westrop
(Writing – review & editing)
b
Oklahoma Museum of Natural History and School of Geosciences, University of Oklahoma, Norman, OK 73072, USA
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Gerd Geyer
Gerd Geyer
(Writing – original draft, Writing – review & editing)
c
Institut für Geographie und Geologie, Lehrstuhl für Geodynamik und Geomaterialforschung, Bayerische Julius-Maximilians-Universität Würzburg, Am Hubland, 97074 Würzburg, Germany
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a
New York State Museum, 222 Madison Avenue, Albany, NY 12230, USA
Stephen R. Westrop
Writing – review & editing
b
Oklahoma Museum of Natural History and School of Geosciences, University of Oklahoma, Norman, OK 73072, USA
Gerd Geyer
Writing – original draft, Writing – review & editing
c
Institut für Geographie und Geologie, Lehrstuhl für Geodynamik und Geomaterialforschung, Bayerische Julius-Maximilians-Universität Würzburg, Am Hubland, 97074 Würzburg, GermanyCorresponding author: Ed Landing (email: [email protected])
Publisher: Canadian Science Publishing
Received:
31 May 2022
Accepted:
19 Aug 2022
Accepted Manuscript:
30 Aug 2022
First Online:
09 Mar 2023
Online ISSN: 1480-3313
Print ISSN: 0008-4077
The Author(s)
Permission for reuse (free in most cases) can be obtained from copyright.com.
Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences (2023) 60 (2): 133–171.
Article history
Received:
31 May 2022
Accepted:
19 Aug 2022
Accepted Manuscript:
30 Aug 2022
First Online:
09 Mar 2023
Citation
Ed Landing, Stephen R. Westrop, Gerd Geyer; Trans-Avalonian green–black boundary (early Middle Cambrian): transform fault-driven epeirogeny and onset of 26 m.y. of shallow-marine, black mudstone in Avalonia (Rhode Island–Belgium) and Baltica. Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences 2022;; 60 (2): 133–171. doi: https://doi.org/10.1139/cjes-2022-0065
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Index Terms/Descriptors
- Avalonia
- Cambrian
- Canada
- Cape Breton Island
- clastic rocks
- Eastern Canada
- England
- epeirogeny
- Europe
- faults
- geodynamics
- Great Britain
- lithostratigraphy
- marine environment
- Maritime Provinces
- Massachusetts
- Meguma Terrane
- Middle Cambrian
- mudstone
- New Brunswick
- Newfoundland
- Newfoundland and Labrador
- Nova Scotia
- paleoenvironment
- Paleozoic
- Rhode Island
- sedimentary rocks
- shallow-water environment
- Shropshire England
- stratigraphic boundary
- strike-slip faults
- transform faults
- unconformities
- United Kingdom
- United States
- Wales
- Warwickshire England
- Western Europe
- Cavendish Formation
- Manuels River Formation
- MacMullin Formation
- MacLean Brook Group
- Fossil Brook Member
- Dugald Formation
Latitude & Longitude
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