Iapetus Ocean
The Iapetus Ocean (Template:IPAc-en; Template:Respell)<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> existed in the late Neoproterozoic and early Paleozoic eras of the geologic timescale (between 600 and 400 million years ago). It was in the southern hemisphere, between the paleocontinents of Laurentia, Baltica and Avalonia. The ocean disappeared with the Acadian, Caledonian and Taconic orogenies, when these three continents joined to form one big landmass called Euramerica. The "southern" Iapetus Ocean has been proposed to have closed with the Famatinian and Taconic orogenies, meaning a collision between western Gondwana and Laurentia.
Because the Iapetus Ocean was positioned between continental masses that would at a much later time roughly form the opposite shores of the Atlantic Ocean, it can be seen as a sort of precursor of the Atlantic, and the process by which it opened shares many similarities with that of the Atlantic's initial opening in the Jurassic.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> The Iapetus Ocean was therefore named for the titan Iapetus, who in Greek mythology was the father of Atlas, after whom the Atlantic Ocean was named.Template:Efn-ua
Research historyEdit
At the start of the 20th century, American paleontologist Charles Walcott noticed differences in early Paleozoic benthic trilobites of Laurentia (such as Olenellidae, the so-called "Pacific fauna"), as found in Scotland and western Newfoundland, and those of Baltica (such as Paradoxididae, often called the "Atlantic fauna"), as found in the southern parts of the British Isles and eastern Newfoundland. Geologists of the early 20th century presumed that a large trough, a so-called geosyncline, had existed between Scotland and England in the early Paleozoic, keeping the two sides separated.<ref name="Dalziel-1997">Template:Harvnb</ref>
With the development of plate tectonics in the 1960s, geologists such as Arthur Holmes and John Tuzo Wilson concluded that the Atlantic Ocean must have had a precursor before the time of Pangaea. Wilson also noticed that the Atlantic had opened at roughly the same place where its precursor ocean had closed. This led him to his Wilson Cycle hypothesis.<ref name="Dalziel-1997"/>
Geodynamic historyEdit
Neoproterozoic originEdit
In many spots in Scandinavia basaltic dikes are found with ages between 670 and 650 million years. These are interpreted as evidence that by that time, rifting had started that would form the Iapetus Ocean.<ref name="Torsvik-etal-1996">Template:Harvnb</ref> In Newfoundland and Labrador, the Long Range dikes are also thought to have formed during the formation of the Iapetus Ocean.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> It has been proposed that both the Fen Complex in Norway and the Alnö Complex in Sweden formed as consequence to mild extensional tectonics in the ancient continent of Baltica that followed the opening of the Iapetus Ocean.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>
The eastern Iapetus Ocean is believed to have opened around 590 Ma with the emplacement of the Central Iapetus Magmatic Province between Laurentia and Baltica.<ref name="OnTheOriginsOfTheIapetusOcean">Template:Cite journal</ref> The southern Iapetus Ocean opened between Laurentia and southwestern Gondwana (now South America) about 550 Ma, close to the end of the Ediacaran period. At the time it did so the Adamastor Ocean further east closed.<ref name=Gaucheretal2010>Template:Cite book</ref> The opening of the Iapetus Ocean probably postdates the opening of the Puncoviscana Ocean, which is believed to have opened around 700 Ma as Laurentia drifted away from Amazonia,<ref name="OnTheOriginsOfTheIapetusOcean"/> with the Iapetus Ocean being separated from the Puncoviscana Ocean by the ribbon-shaped Arequipa-Antofalla terrane. However, the formation of both oceans seems unrelated.<ref name=escayolartal>Template:Cite journal</ref>
PaleozoicEdit
Southwest of the Iapetus, a volcanic island arc evolved from the early Cambrian (540 million years ago) onward. This volcanic arc was formed above a subduction zone where the oceanic lithosphere of the Iapetus Ocean subducted southward under other oceanic lithosphere. From Cambrian times (about 550 million years ago) the western Iapetus Ocean began to grow progressively narrower due to this subduction. The same happened further north and east, where Avalonia and Baltica began to move towards Laurentia from the Ordovician (488–444 million years ago) onward.<ref name="Torsvik-etal-1996"/>
Trilobite faunas of the continental shelves of Baltica and Laurentia are still very different in the Ordovician, but Silurian faunas show progressive mixing of species from both sides, because the continents moved closer together.<ref>Template:Harvnb</ref>
In the west, the Iapetus Ocean closed with the Taconic orogeny (480–430 million years ago), when the volcanic island arc collided with Laurentia. Some authors consider the oceanic basin south of the island arc also a part of the Iapetus, this branch closed during the later Acadian orogeny, when Avalonia collided with Laurentia.Template:Citation needed
It has been suggested that the southern Iapetus Ocean closed during a continental collision between Laurentia and western Gondwana (South America). If factual the Taconic orogen would be the northward continuation of the Famatinian orogen exposed in Argentina.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>Template:Efn-ua
Meanwhile, the eastern parts had closed too: the Tornquist Sea between Avalonia and Baltica already during the late Ordovician,<ref>Template:Harvnb</ref> the main branch between Baltica–Avalonia and Laurentia during the Grampian and Scandian phases of the Caledonian orogeny (440–420 million years ago).Template:Citation needed
At the end of the Silurian period (about 420 million years ago) the Iapetus Ocean had completely disappeared and the combined mass of the three continents formed the "new" continent of Laurasia,<ref>See for paleogeographic reconstructions of the collisions for example Template:Harvnb; Template:Harvnb</ref> which would itself be the northern component of the singular supercontinent of Pangaea.Template:Citation needed
See alsoEdit
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- Ammonoosuc Volcanics – A metamorphosed rock unit that formed during the closure of the Iapetus Ocean
NotesEdit
ReferencesEdit
LiteratureEdit
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- Gee D., Janák M., Majka J., Robinson P., van Roermund H., 2013, Subduction along and within the Baltoscandian margin during closing of the Iapetus Ocean and Baltica–Laurentia collision, Lithosphere, Vol. 5, pp. 169-178[1]
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- Robert B., Domeier M., Johannes Jakob J., 2021, On the origins of the Iapetus Ocean, Earth-Science Review, Col, 221, 103791 [2]
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External linksEdit
- Earth.ox.ac.uk – For more extensive geologic information see Ordovician paleogeography and the evolution of the Iapetus ocean.