Paleozoic Laurentia-Gondwana interaction and the origin of the Appalachian-Andean mountain system
Open Access
- 1 February 1994
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Geological Society of America in GSA Bulletin
- Vol. 106 (2) , 243-252
- https://doi.org/10.1130/0016-7606(1994)106<0243:plgiat>2.3.co;2
Abstract
Laurentia, the rift-bounded Precambrian nucleus of North America, may have broken out from a Neoproterozoic supercontinent between East and West Gondwana. Several lines of evidence suggest that the Appalachian margin of Laurentia subsequently collided with the proto-Andean margin of the amalgamated Gondwana supercontinent in different relative positions during early and mid-Paleozoic time, in route to final docking against northwest Africa to complete the assembly of Pangea. Hence the Appalachian and Andean orogens may have originated as a single mountain system. The overall hypothesis retains the same paleomagnetic and paleobiogeographic controls as previous global reconstructions for the Paleozoic Era. Laurentia-Gondwana collisions may help to explain contemporaneous unconformities in the Paleozoic sedimentary cover of the Laurentian, Gondwanan, and Baltic cratons.This publication has 8 references indexed in Scilit:
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