- Abstract
- Affiliation
- All
- Authors
- Book Series
- DOI
- EISBN
- EISSN
- Full Text
- GeoRef ID
- ISBN
- ISSN
- Issue
- Keyword (GeoRef Descriptor)
- Meeting Information
- Report #
- Title
- Volume
- Abstract
- Affiliation
- All
- Authors
- Book Series
- DOI
- EISBN
- EISSN
- Full Text
- GeoRef ID
- ISBN
- ISSN
- Issue
- Keyword (GeoRef Descriptor)
- Meeting Information
- Report #
- Title
- Volume
- Abstract
- Affiliation
- All
- Authors
- Book Series
- DOI
- EISBN
- EISSN
- Full Text
- GeoRef ID
- ISBN
- ISSN
- Issue
- Keyword (GeoRef Descriptor)
- Meeting Information
- Report #
- Title
- Volume
- Abstract
- Affiliation
- All
- Authors
- Book Series
- DOI
- EISBN
- EISSN
- Full Text
- GeoRef ID
- ISBN
- ISSN
- Issue
- Keyword (GeoRef Descriptor)
- Meeting Information
- Report #
- Title
- Volume
- Abstract
- Affiliation
- All
- Authors
- Book Series
- DOI
- EISBN
- EISSN
- Full Text
- GeoRef ID
- ISBN
- ISSN
- Issue
- Keyword (GeoRef Descriptor)
- Meeting Information
- Report #
- Title
- Volume
- Abstract
- Affiliation
- All
- Authors
- Book Series
- DOI
- EISBN
- EISSN
- Full Text
- GeoRef ID
- ISBN
- ISSN
- Issue
- Keyword (GeoRef Descriptor)
- Meeting Information
- Report #
- Title
- Volume
NARROW
GeoRef Subject
-
all geography including DSDP/ODP Sites and Legs
-
Asia
-
Middle East
-
Turkey
-
Anatolia (1)
-
Ankara Turkey (1)
-
-
-
-
Europe
-
Central Europe
-
Poland
-
Sowie Mountains (1)
-
-
Sudeten Mountains
-
Sowie Mountains (1)
-
-
-
Variscides (1)
-
Western Europe
-
Ireland
-
Galway Ireland (1)
-
Mayo Ireland (1)
-
-
United Kingdom
-
Great Britain
-
England
-
Cornwall England
-
Land's End (1)
-
-
Devon England (1)
-
South-West England (1)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
elements, isotopes
-
metals
-
rare earths (4)
-
-
-
fossils
-
Graptolithina (1)
-
Invertebrata (1)
-
-
geologic age
-
Mesozoic
-
Cretaceous (2)
-
Triassic
-
Upper Triassic (1)
-
-
-
Moldanubian (1)
-
Paleozoic
-
Carboniferous (2)
-
Devonian
-
Old Red Sandstone (1)
-
-
Ordovician
-
Lower Ordovician
-
Tremadocian (1)
-
-
-
Permian (1)
-
-
Rhenohercynian (1)
-
-
igneous rocks
-
igneous rocks
-
plutonic rocks
-
diabase
-
tholeiitic dolerite (1)
-
-
ultramafics (1)
-
-
volcanic rocks
-
basalts
-
alkali basalts (2)
-
mid-ocean ridge basalts (2)
-
tholeiite (1)
-
tholeiitic basalt (1)
-
-
-
-
ophiolite (2)
-
-
metamorphic rocks
-
metamorphic rocks
-
gneisses (1)
-
hornfels (1)
-
metaigneous rocks
-
metabasite (1)
-
-
metasedimentary rocks (1)
-
metavolcanic rocks (1)
-
schists
-
greenschist (1)
-
-
-
ophiolite (2)
-
turbidite (1)
-
-
Primary terms
-
Asia
-
Middle East
-
Turkey
-
Anatolia (1)
-
Ankara Turkey (1)
-
-
-
-
continental drift (1)
-
deformation (1)
-
Europe
-
Central Europe
-
Poland
-
Sowie Mountains (1)
-
-
Sudeten Mountains
-
Sowie Mountains (1)
-
-
-
Variscides (1)
-
Western Europe
-
Ireland
-
Galway Ireland (1)
-
Mayo Ireland (1)
-
-
United Kingdom
-
Great Britain
-
England
-
Cornwall England
-
Land's End (1)
-
-
Devon England (1)
-
South-West England (1)
-
-
-
-
-
-
geochemistry (9)
-
Graptolithina (1)
-
igneous rocks
-
plutonic rocks
-
diabase
-
tholeiitic dolerite (1)
-
-
ultramafics (1)
-
-
volcanic rocks
-
basalts
-
alkali basalts (2)
-
mid-ocean ridge basalts (2)
-
tholeiite (1)
-
tholeiitic basalt (1)
-
-
-
-
intrusions (3)
-
Invertebrata (1)
-
lava (1)
-
magmas (1)
-
mantle (1)
-
Mesozoic
-
Cretaceous (2)
-
Triassic
-
Upper Triassic (1)
-
-
-
metals
-
rare earths (4)
-
-
metamorphic rocks
-
gneisses (1)
-
hornfels (1)
-
metaigneous rocks
-
metabasite (1)
-
-
metasedimentary rocks (1)
-
metavolcanic rocks (1)
-
schists
-
greenschist (1)
-
-
-
metamorphism (3)
-
metasomatism (1)
-
orogeny (2)
-
Paleozoic
-
Carboniferous (2)
-
Devonian
-
Old Red Sandstone (1)
-
-
Ordovician
-
Lower Ordovician
-
Tremadocian (1)
-
-
-
Permian (1)
-
-
petrology (5)
-
plate tectonics (1)
-
sedimentary petrology (1)
-
sedimentary rocks
-
clastic rocks
-
sandstone (1)
-
-
-
stratigraphy (1)
-
tectonics (4)
-
tectonophysics (1)
-
-
sedimentary rocks
-
sedimentary rocks
-
clastic rocks
-
sandstone (1)
-
-
-
turbidite (1)
-
-
sediments
-
turbidite (1)
-
Ślęża Ophiolite: geochemical features and relationship to Lower Palaeozoic rift magmatism in the Bohemian Massif
Abstract The Ślęża Ophiolite is one of several thrust-bounded crustal slices dominated by metabasites in the western Sudetes. The apparent field association of serpentinites, gabbros and amphibolitic components led previous workers to consider that this lithological assemblage represented an ophiolite sequence. Fieldwork suggests that the ophiolite is now highly inclined, partly overturned, so that an ophiolitic pseudostratigraphy can be deduced, grading from serpentinites and gabbros in the south to metabasite lavas in the north. The recent discovery of pillow lava structures (at Gozdnica Hill, to the west of Sobótka town) confirms that the volcanic top of the ophiolite lies in the northern section, as might be expected from the ophiolite model. The gabbros have undergone greenschist facies metamorphism with the random development of low-grade amphibole. The volcanic portion of the sequence comprise metamorphosed dolerites and basalts partly within the contact aureole of the Variscan Strzegom-Sobótka granite. Previous work dated plagiogranites associated with the gabbros at about 400–420 Ma (U-Pb zircon ages). Geochemical data suggest that the gabbros are distinct and apparently not comagmatic with the volcanic section of sheeted dykes and lavas. The gabbros, in particular, although very depleted in incompatible elements are dissimilar to supra-subduction zone ophiolites, exhibiting instead N-MORB-like light REE depleted patterns. Depletion is both a feature of the cumulate character of many of the gabbros, as well as a source effect (especially the uniformly low Nb content). The metabasalts and metadolerites, on the other hand, are a well-evolved single comagmatic suite with high incompatible element contents, Zr/Y approximately 3–4, and generally flat to light REE-depleted patterns. The geochemical dichotomy of the plutonic and volcanic segments calls into question a simple interpretation of the body as a single-stage coherent stratiform ophiolite. Chemical comparison with Sudetic metabasites from within the nearby Rudawy-Janowickie and Kacazawa Complexes shows that the Ślęża metabasites have a number of features in common, including the presence of both low-Ti (gabbros) and high-Ti (dykes and lavas) chemical groups. The correlation of the gabbros, dykes and lavas with the low-Ti and high-Ti (Main Series) metatholeiites respectively, seen throughout the Bohemian Massif, as well as the Sudetes, places them within the regional collage of Palaeozoic crustal blocks separated by the Saxothuringian Seaway. Comparison with Bohemian Massif metabasites also indicates that sediment contamination of the Ślęża Ophiolite sources was not an important process and that an enriched plume source played no part in the generation of the ophiolitic melts. The two Ślęża chemical groups were derived from variably depleted asthenospheric mantle sources. Simple modelling suggests that the volcanic segment could have been derived by 10–15% partial melting of a depleted N-MORB source, whereas the plutonic segment represents around 30% partial melting of a more depleted source. To develop varying degrees of depletion in an oceanic environment, the two sources could be related via incremental partial melting of a shallow MORB-type source.
Abstract During early Palaeozoic time the Cadomian basement of the northern margin of Gondwana underwent extensive rifting with the formation of various crustal blocks that eventually became separated by seaways. Attenuation of the continental lithosphere was accompanied by the emplacement of anatectic granites and extensive mafic-dominated bimodal magmatism, often featuring basalts with an ocean crust chemistry. Intrusive metabasites in deep crustal segments (associated with granitic orthogneisses) or extrusive submarine lavas at higher levels (associated with pelagic and carbonate basinal sediments) show a wide range of chemical characteristics dominated by variably enriched tholeiites. Most crustal blocks show the presence of three main chemical groups of metabasites: Low-Ti tholeiitic metabasalts, Main Series tholeiitic metabasalts and alkalic metabasalt series. They differ in the degree of incompatible element enrichment (depleted to highly enriched normalized patterns), in selected large ion lithophile (LIL) to high field strength element (HFSE) ratios, and abundances of HFSE and their ratios. Both the metatholeiite groups are characterized by a common enrichment of light REE–Th–Nb–Ta. High Th values (or Th/Ta ratios) and associated low ε Nd values (especially in the Low-Ti tholeiitic metabasalts) reflect sediment contamination in the mantle source rather than at crustal levels, although this latter feature cannot be ruled out entirely. The range of chemical variation exhibited is a consequence of the melting of (a) a lithospheric source contaminated by a sediment component (which generated the Low-Ti tholeiites), and (b) a high-level asthenospheric mid-ocean ridge basalt (MORB)-type source that mixed with a plume component (which generated the range of enriched Main Series tholeiites and the alkali basalts). It is considered that a plume played an important role in the generation of both early granites and the enriched MORB-type compositions in the metabasites. Its significance for the initial fragmentation of Gondwana is unknown, but its presence may have facilitated deep continental crust melting and the fracturing into small crustal blocks. The early–mid-Jurassic plume-instigated break-up of the southern Gondwana supercontinent is considered to be a possible tectonic and chemical analogue for Early Palaeozoic Sudetic rifting and its magmatic products.