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Iapetus Ocean

The Iapetus Ocean (/ˈæpɪtəs/; eye-AP-ih-təs)[1] was an ocean that existed in the late Neoproterozoic and early Paleozoic eras of the geologic timescale (between 600 and 400 million years ago). The Iapetus Ocean was situated 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.

Reconstruction of how the Iapetus Ocean and surrounding continents might have been arranged during the late Ediacaran period

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.[2] 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.[A]

Research history edit

 
Geological fault at Niarbyl. The narrow white diagonal line near centre of picture is where the two sides of the Iapetus Ocean met during its closure. Sutures such as these are the modern evidence for this ancient ocean.

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.[4]

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.[4]

Geodynamic history edit

Neoproterozoic origin edit

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.[5] In Newfoundland and Labrador, the Long Range dikes are also thought to have formed during the formation of the Iapetus Ocean.[6] 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.[7]

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.[8] 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.[9] 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,[8] 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.[10]

Paleozoic edit

 
Position of the continents after the Caledonian orogeny (Devonian to Permian times). Differences in fossil faunas on both sides of the red line (the Iapetus Suture) are evidence for the existence of an ocean between the two sides in the time before the continents were joined in the supercontinent Pangaea. [11]

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.[5]

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.[12]

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.[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.[13][B]

Meanwhile, the eastern parts had closed too: the Tornquist Sea between Avalonia and Baltica already during the late Ordovician,[14] the main branch between Baltica-Avalonia and Laurentia during the Grampian and Scandian phases of the Caledonian orogeny (440–420 million years ago).[citation needed]

At the end of the Silurian period (c. 420 million years ago) the Iapetus Ocean had completely disappeared and the combined mass of the three continents formed the "new" continent of Laurasia,[15] which would itself be the northern component of the singular supercontinent of Pangaea.[citation needed]

See also edit

  • Avalonia – Microcontinent in the Paleozoic era named for the Avalon Peninsula in Newfoundland
  • Baltica – Late-Proterozoic to early-Palaeozoic continent
  • Central Iapetus Magmatic Province
  • Geologic timescale – System that relates geologic strata to time
  • Khanty Ocean – Small Precambrian ocean between Baltica and the Siberian continent
  • List of ancient oceans – List of Earth's former oceans
  • London-Brabant Massif – Ancient crystalline basement stretching across northern Belgium from Rhineland to East Anglia
  • Plate tectonics – Movement of Earth's lithosphere
  • Southern uplands of Scotland – Southernmost and least populous region of Scotland
  • Ammonoosuc Volcanics - A metamorphosed rock unit that formed during the closure of the Iapetus Ocean.

Notes edit

  1. ^ The name Iapetus was first used by Harland & Gayer 1972, before that the ocean was referred to as the Proto-Atlantic.[3]
  2. ^ In other words, what is at present the northern end of the Famatinian orogen would have been connected with what is currently the southern end of the Taconic orogen.

References edit

  1. ^ Wells, John (14 April 2010). "Iapetus and tonotopy". John Wells's phonetic blog. from the original on 25 December 2019. Retrieved 21 April 2010.
  2. ^ Rankin, Douglas W. (10 November 1976). "Appalachian salients and recesses: Late Precambrian continental breakup and the opening of the Iapetus Ocean". Journal of Geophysical Research. 81 (32): 5605–5619. Bibcode:1976JGR....81.5605R. doi:10.1029/JB081i032p05605. Retrieved 9 November 2022.
  3. ^ Banham, P.H.; Gibbs, A.D.; Hopper, F.W.M. (1979). "Geological evidence in favour of a Jotunheimen Caledonian suture". Nature. 277 (5694): 289–291. Bibcode:1979Natur.277..289B. doi:10.1038/277289a0. S2CID 4360636.
  4. ^ a b Dalziel 1997, Review: "Archetypal" and "Alternative" Paleogeographic Scenarios, pp. 18–19
  5. ^ a b Torsvik et al. 1996
  6. ^ Kamo, Sandra L.; Gower, Charles F.; Krogh, Thomas E. (1989). "Birthdate for the lapetus Ocean? A precise U-Pb zircon and baddeleyite age for the Long Range dikes, southeast Labrador". Geology. Geological Society of America. 17 (7): 602. Bibcode:1989Geo....17..602K. doi:10.1130/0091-7613(1989)017<0602:bftloa>2.3.co;2. ISSN 0091-7613.
  7. ^ Meert, Joseph G.; Torsvik, Trond H.; Eide, Elizabeth A.; Dahlgren, Sven (1998). "Tectonic Significance of the Fen Province, S. Norway: Constraints from Geochronology and Paleomagnetism" (PDF). The Journal of Geology. 106 (5): 553–564. Bibcode:1998JG....106..553M. doi:10.1086/516041. S2CID 129740587. (PDF) from the original on 2016-10-25.
  8. ^ a b Robert, Boris; Domeier, Mathew; Jakob, Johannes (October 2021). "On the origins of the Iapetus Ocean". Earth-Science Reviews. 221: 103791. Bibcode:2021ESRv..22103791R. doi:10.1016/j.earscirev.2021.103791. S2CID 239073940.
  9. ^ Gaucher, Claudio; Frimmel, Hartwig E.; Germs, J.B. (2010). "Tectonic Events and Palaeogeographic Evolution of Southwestern Gondwana in the Neoproterozoic and Cambrian". In Gaucher, Claudio; Sial, Alcides; Haverson, Galen (eds.). Neoproterozoic-cambrian tectonics, global change and evolution: a focus on south western Gondwana. Elsevier. p. 295–316. ISBN 978-0-08-093277-4.
  10. ^ Escayola P., Mónica; van Staal, Cees R.; Davis, William J. (2011). "The age and tectonic setting of the Puncoviscana Formation in northwestern Argentina: An accretionary complex related to Early Cambrian closure of the Puncoviscana Ocean and accretion of the Arequipa-Antofalla block". Journal of South American Earth Sciences. 32 (4): 438–459. Bibcode:2011JSAES..32..438E. doi:10.1016/j.jsames.2011.04.013. hdl:11336/84857.
  11. ^ Figure based on Windley 1996 and Ziegler 1990
  12. ^ Cocks & Fortey 1990
  13. ^ Dalla Salda, Luis H.; Dalziel, Ian W. D.; Cingolani, Carlos A.; Varela, Ricardo (1992). "Did the Taconic Appalachians continue into southern South America?". Geology. 20 (12): 1059–1062. Bibcode:1992Geo....20.1059D. doi:10.1130/0091-7613(1992)020<1059:dttaci>2.3.co;2.
  14. ^ Torsvik & Rehnström 2003
  15. ^ See for paleogeographic reconstructions of the collisions for example Stanley 1999, p. 386; Ziegler 1990, pp. 17–19

Literature edit

  • Cocks, L. R. N.; Fortey, R.A. (1990). "Biogeography of Ordovician and Silurian faunas". In McKerrow, W. S.; Scotese, C. F. (eds.). Palaeozoic Palaeogeography and Biogeography. Geological Society of London Memoirs. Vol. 12. pp. 97–104. doi:10.1144/GSL.MEM.1990.012.01.08. S2CID 129626213.
  • Dalziel, I. W. (1997). "Neoproterozoic-Paleozoic geography and tectonics: Review, hypothesis, environmental speculation". Geological Society of America Bulletin. 109 (1): 16–42. Bibcode:1997GSAB..109...16D. doi:10.1130/0016-7606(1997)109<0016:ONPGAT>2.3.CO;2. S2CID 129800903.
  • 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]
  • Harland, W. B.; Gayer, R. A. (1972). "The Arctic Caledonides and earlier Oceans". Geological Magazine. Cambridge University Press (CUP). 109 (4): 289–314. Bibcode:1972GeoM..109..289H. doi:10.1017/s0016756800037717. ISSN 0016-7568. S2CID 131091660.
  • Meert, Joseph G.; Torsvik, Trond H. (2003). "The making and unmaking of a supercontinent: Rodinia revisited". Tectonophysics. 375 (1–4): 261–288. Bibcode:2003Tectp.375..261M. doi:10.1016/s0040-1951(03)00342-1. ISSN 0040-1951.
  • Robert B., Domeier M., Johannes Jakob J., 2021, On the origins of the Iapetus Ocean, Earth-Science Review, Col, 221, 103791 [2]
  • Stanley, Steven M. (1999). Earth System History. W.H. Freeman. ISBN 978-0-7167-3377-5.
  • Torsvik, Trond H.; Rehnström, Emma F. (2003). "The Tornquist Sea and Baltica–Avalonia docking". Tectonophysics. 362 (1–4): 67–82. Bibcode:2003Tectp.362...67T. doi:10.1016/s0040-1951(02)00631-5. ISSN 0040-1951.
  • Torsvik, T. H.; Smethurst, M. A.; Meert, J. G.; Van der Voo, R.; McKerrow, W. S.; Brasier, M. D.; Sturt, B. A.; Walderhaug, H. J. (1996). "Continental break-up and collision in the Neoproterozoic and Palaeozoic—a tale of Baltica and Laurentia". Earth-Science Reviews. 40 (3): 229–258. Bibcode:1996ESRv...40..229T. doi:10.1016/0012-8252(96)00008-6.
  • Windley, B. F. (1996). The Evolving Continents (3rd ed.). Wiley. ISBN 978-0-471-91739-7.
  • Ziegler, Peter A. (1990). Geological Atlas of Western and Central Europe (2nd ed.). Shell Internationale Petroleum Maatschappij B.V. ISBN 978-90-6644-125-5.

External links edit

  • Earth.ox.ac.uk - For more extensive geologic information see Ordovician paleogeography and the evolution of the Iapetus ocean.

iapetus, ocean, təs, ocean, that, existed, late, neoproterozoic, early, paleozoic, eras, geologic, timescale, between, million, years, situated, southern, hemisphere, between, paleocontinents, laurentia, baltica, avalonia, ocean, disappeared, with, acadian, ca. The Iapetus Ocean aɪ ˈ ae p ɪ t e s eye AP ih tes 1 was an ocean that existed in the late Neoproterozoic and early Paleozoic eras of the geologic timescale between 600 and 400 million years ago The Iapetus Ocean was situated 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 Reconstruction of how the Iapetus Ocean and surrounding continents might have been arranged during the late Ediacaran periodBecause 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 2 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 A Contents 1 Research history 2 Geodynamic history 2 1 Neoproterozoic origin 2 2 Paleozoic 3 See also 4 Notes 5 References 5 1 Literature 6 External linksResearch history edit nbsp Geological fault at Niarbyl The narrow white diagonal line near centre of picture is where the two sides of the Iapetus Ocean met during its closure Sutures such as these are the modern evidence for this ancient ocean 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 4 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 4 Geodynamic history editNeoproterozoic origin edit 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 5 In Newfoundland and Labrador the Long Range dikes are also thought to have formed during the formation of the Iapetus Ocean 6 It has been proposed that both the Fen Complex in Norway and the Alno Complex in Sweden formed as consequence to mild extensional tectonics in the ancient continent of Baltica that followed the opening of the Iapetus Ocean 7 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 8 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 9 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 8 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 10 Paleozoic edit nbsp Position of the continents after the Caledonian orogeny Devonian to Permian times Differences in fossil faunas on both sides of the red line the Iapetus Suture are evidence for the existence of an ocean between the two sides in the time before the continents were joined in the supercontinent Pangaea 11 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 5 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 12 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 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 13 B Meanwhile the eastern parts had closed too the Tornquist Sea between Avalonia and Baltica already during the late Ordovician 14 the main branch between Baltica Avalonia and Laurentia during the Grampian and Scandian phases of the Caledonian orogeny 440 420 million years ago citation needed At the end of the Silurian period c 420 million years ago the Iapetus Ocean had completely disappeared and the combined mass of the three continents formed the new continent of Laurasia 15 which would itself be the northern component of the singular supercontinent of Pangaea citation needed See also editAvalonia Microcontinent in the Paleozoic era named for the Avalon Peninsula in Newfoundland Baltica Late Proterozoic to early Palaeozoic continent Central Iapetus Magmatic Province Geologic timescale System that relates geologic strata to timePages displaying short descriptions of redirect targets Khanty Ocean Small Precambrian ocean between Baltica and the Siberian continent List of ancient oceans List of Earth s former oceans London Brabant Massif Ancient crystalline basement stretching across northern Belgium from Rhineland to East AngliaPages displaying short descriptions of redirect targets Plate tectonics Movement of Earth s lithosphere Southern uplands of Scotland Southernmost and least populous region of ScotlandPages displaying short descriptions of redirect targets Ammonoosuc Volcanics A metamorphosed rock unit that formed during the closure of the Iapetus Ocean Notes edit The name Iapetus was first used by Harland amp Gayer 1972 before that the ocean was referred to as the Proto Atlantic 3 In other words what is at present the northern end of the Famatinian orogen would have been connected with what is currently the southern end of the Taconic orogen References edit Wells John 14 April 2010 Iapetus and tonotopy John Wells s phonetic blog Archived from the original on 25 December 2019 Retrieved 21 April 2010 Rankin Douglas W 10 November 1976 Appalachian salients and recesses Late Precambrian continental breakup and the opening of the Iapetus Ocean Journal of Geophysical Research 81 32 5605 5619 Bibcode 1976JGR 81 5605R doi 10 1029 JB081i032p05605 Retrieved 9 November 2022 Banham P H Gibbs A D Hopper F W M 1979 Geological evidence in favour of a Jotunheimen Caledonian suture Nature 277 5694 289 291 Bibcode 1979Natur 277 289B doi 10 1038 277289a0 S2CID 4360636 a b Dalziel 1997 Review Archetypal and Alternative Paleogeographic Scenarios pp 18 19 a b Torsvik et al 1996 Kamo Sandra L Gower Charles F Krogh Thomas E 1989 Birthdate for the lapetus Ocean A precise U Pb zircon and baddeleyite age for the Long Range dikes southeast Labrador Geology Geological Society of America 17 7 602 Bibcode 1989Geo 17 602K doi 10 1130 0091 7613 1989 017 lt 0602 bftloa gt 2 3 co 2 ISSN 0091 7613 Meert Joseph G Torsvik Trond H Eide Elizabeth A Dahlgren Sven 1998 Tectonic Significance of the Fen Province S Norway Constraints from Geochronology and Paleomagnetism PDF The Journal of Geology 106 5 553 564 Bibcode 1998JG 106 553M doi 10 1086 516041 S2CID 129740587 Archived PDF from the original on 2016 10 25 a b Robert Boris Domeier Mathew Jakob Johannes October 2021 On the origins of the Iapetus Ocean Earth Science Reviews 221 103791 Bibcode 2021ESRv 22103791R doi 10 1016 j earscirev 2021 103791 S2CID 239073940 Gaucher Claudio Frimmel Hartwig E Germs J B 2010 Tectonic Events and Palaeogeographic Evolution of Southwestern Gondwana in the Neoproterozoic and Cambrian In Gaucher Claudio Sial Alcides Haverson Galen eds Neoproterozoic cambrian tectonics global change and evolution a focus on south western Gondwana Elsevier p 295 316 ISBN 978 0 08 093277 4 Escayola P Monica van Staal Cees R Davis William J 2011 The age and tectonic setting of the Puncoviscana Formation in northwestern Argentina An accretionary complex related to Early Cambrian closure of the Puncoviscana Ocean and accretion of the Arequipa Antofalla block Journal of South American Earth Sciences 32 4 438 459 Bibcode 2011JSAES 32 438E doi 10 1016 j jsames 2011 04 013 hdl 11336 84857 Figure based on Windley 1996 and Ziegler 1990 Cocks amp Fortey 1990 Dalla Salda Luis H Dalziel Ian W D Cingolani Carlos A Varela Ricardo 1992 Did the Taconic Appalachians continue into southern South America Geology 20 12 1059 1062 Bibcode 1992Geo 20 1059D doi 10 1130 0091 7613 1992 020 lt 1059 dttaci gt 2 3 co 2 Torsvik amp Rehnstrom 2003 See for paleogeographic reconstructions of the collisions for example Stanley 1999 p 386 Ziegler 1990 pp 17 19 Literature edit Cocks L R N Fortey R A 1990 Biogeography of Ordovician and Silurian faunas In McKerrow W S Scotese C F eds Palaeozoic Palaeogeography and Biogeography Geological Society of London Memoirs Vol 12 pp 97 104 doi 10 1144 GSL MEM 1990 012 01 08 S2CID 129626213 Dalziel I W 1997 Neoproterozoic Paleozoic geography and tectonics Review hypothesis environmental speculation Geological Society of America Bulletin 109 1 16 42 Bibcode 1997GSAB 109 16D doi 10 1130 0016 7606 1997 109 lt 0016 ONPGAT gt 2 3 CO 2 S2CID 129800903 Gee D Janak 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 Harland W B Gayer R A 1972 The Arctic Caledonides and earlier Oceans Geological Magazine Cambridge University Press CUP 109 4 289 314 Bibcode 1972GeoM 109 289H doi 10 1017 s0016756800037717 ISSN 0016 7568 S2CID 131091660 Meert Joseph G Torsvik Trond H 2003 The making and unmaking of a supercontinent Rodinia revisited Tectonophysics 375 1 4 261 288 Bibcode 2003Tectp 375 261M doi 10 1016 s0040 1951 03 00342 1 ISSN 0040 1951 Robert B Domeier M Johannes Jakob J 2021 On the origins of the Iapetus Ocean Earth Science Review Col 221 103791 2 Stanley Steven M 1999 Earth System History W H Freeman ISBN 978 0 7167 3377 5 Torsvik Trond H Rehnstrom Emma F 2003 The Tornquist Sea and Baltica Avalonia docking Tectonophysics 362 1 4 67 82 Bibcode 2003Tectp 362 67T doi 10 1016 s0040 1951 02 00631 5 ISSN 0040 1951 Torsvik T H Smethurst M A Meert J G Van der Voo R McKerrow W S Brasier M D Sturt B A Walderhaug H J 1996 Continental break up and collision in the Neoproterozoic and Palaeozoic a tale of Baltica and Laurentia Earth Science Reviews 40 3 229 258 Bibcode 1996ESRv 40 229T doi 10 1016 0012 8252 96 00008 6 Windley B F 1996 The Evolving Continents 3rd ed Wiley ISBN 978 0 471 91739 7 Ziegler Peter A 1990 Geological Atlas of Western and Central Europe 2nd ed Shell Internationale Petroleum Maatschappij B V ISBN 978 90 6644 125 5 External links editEarth ox ac uk For more extensive geologic information see Ordovician paleogeography and the evolution of the Iapetus ocean Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Iapetus Ocean amp oldid 1187459050, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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