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Laurentia

Laurentia or the North American Craton is a large continental craton that forms the ancient geological core of North America. Many times in its past, Laurentia has been a separate continent, as it is now in the form of North America, although originally it also included the cratonic areas of Greenland and also the northwestern part of Scotland, known as the Hebridean Terrane. During other times in its past, Laurentia has been part of larger continents and supercontinents and itself consists of many smaller terranes assembled on a network of Early Proterozoic orogenic belts. Small microcontinents and oceanic islands collided with and sutured onto the ever-growing Laurentia, and together formed the stable Precambrian craton seen today.[1][2][3]

Laurentia, also called the North American craton

The craton is named after the Laurentian Shield, through the Laurentian Mountains, which received their name from the Saint Lawrence River, named after Lawrence of Rome.[4]

Interior platform edit

In eastern and central Canada, much of the stable craton is exposed at the surface as the Canadian Shield, an area of Precambrian rock covering over a million square miles. This includes some of the oldest rock on Earth, such as the Archean rock of the Acasta Gneiss of Canada, which is 4.04 billion years (Ga) old, and the Istaq Gneiss Complex of Greenland, which is 3.8 billion years old.[5] When subsurface extensions are considered, the wider term Laurentian Shield is more common, not least because large parts of the structure extend outside Canada. In the United States, the craton bedrock is covered with sedimentary rocks on the broad interior platform in the Midwest and Great Plains regions and is exposed only in northern Minnesota, Wisconsin, the New York Adirondacks, and the Upper Peninsula of Michigan.[6] The sequence of sedimentary rocks varies from about 1,000 m to in excess of 6,100 m (3,500–20,000 ft) in thickness. The cratonic rocks are metamorphic or igneous with the overlying sedimentary layers composed mostly of limestones, sandstones, and shales.[7] These sedimentary rocks were largely deposited from 650 to 290 million years ago.[8]

The oldest bedrock, assigned to the Archean Slave, Rae, Hearne, Wyoming, Superior, and Nain Provinces, is located in the northern two thirds of Laurentia. During the Early Proterozoic they were covered by sediments, most of which has now been eroded away.[1]

Greenland is part of Laurentia. The island is now separated from the mainland of North America by the Nares Strait, but this is a Pleistocene erosional feature. The strait is floored with continental crust and shows no indications of a thermal event or seaway tectonism.[9][10] Greenland is composed mostly of crust of Archean to Proterozoic age, with lower Paleocene shelf formations on its northern margin and Devonian to Paleogene formations on its western and eastern margins. The eastern and northern margins were heavily deformed during the Caledonian orogeny.[11][10]

The Isua Greenstone Belt of western Greenland preserves oceanic crust containing sheeted dike complexes. These provide evidence to geologists that mid-ocean ridges existed 3.8 Gya. The Abitibi gold belt in the Superior Province is the largest greenstone belt in the Canadian Shield.[12]

Tectonic history edit

Assembly edit

 
Laurentia basement rocks

Laurentia first assembled from six or seven large fragments of Archean crust at around 2.0 to 1.8 Gya.[3][13] The assembly began when the Slave craton collided with Rae-Hearne craton, and the Rae-Hearne craton collided shortly after with the Superior Craton. These then merged with several smaller fragments of Archean crust, including the Wyoming, Medicine Hat, Sask, Marshfield, and Nain blocks. This series of collisions raised the mountains of the Trans-Hudson orogenic belt, which likely were similar to the modern Himalayas,[3] and the Wopmay orogen of northwest Canada.[14]

During the assembly of the core of Laurentia, banded iron formation was deposited in Michigan, Minnesota, and Labrador.[15]

The resulting nucleus of Laurentia was mostly reworked Archean crust, but with some juvenile crust in the form of volcanic arc belts. Juvenile crust is crust formed from magma freshly extracted from the Earth's mantle rather than recycled from older crustal rock.[3] The intense mountain building of the Trans-Hudson orogeny also formed thick, stable roots beneath the craton,[3] possibly by a process of "kneading" that allowed low density material to move up and high density material to move down.[16]

Over the next 900 million years, Laurentia grew by the accretion of island arcs and other juvenile crust and occasional fragments of older crust (such as the Mojave block). This accretion occurred along the southeastern margin of Laurentia, where there was a long-lived convergent plate boundary. Major accretion episodes included the Yavapai orogeny at 1.71 to 1.68 Gya, which welded the 1.8 to 1.7 Ga Yavapai province to Laurentia; the Mazatzal orogeny at 1.65 to 1.60 Gya, accreting the 1.71 to 1.65 Ga Mazatzal province;[3] the Picuris orogeny at 1.49 to 1.45 Gya,[17] which may have welded the 1.50 to 1.30 Ga Granite-Rhyolite province to Laurentia; and the Grenville orogeny at 1.30 to 0.95 Gya, which accreted the 1.30 to 1.00 Ga Llano-Grenville province to Laurentia. The Picuris orogeny, in particular, was characterized by the intrusion of great volumes of granitoid magma into the juvenile crust, which helped mature the crust and stitch it together. Slab rollback at 1.70 and 1.65 Gya deposited characteristic quartzite-rhyolite beds on the southern margin of the craton. This long episode of accretion doubled the size of Laurentia, but produced craton underlain by relatively weak, hydrous, and fertile (ripe for extraction of magma) mantle lithosphere.[3] The subduction under the southeast margin of the continent likely caused enrichment of the lithospheric mantle beneath the orogenic belts of the Grenville Province.[18]

Around 1.1 Gya, the center of the craton nearly rifted apart along the Midcontinent Rift System. This produced the Keweenawan Supergroup, whose flood basalts are rich in copper ore.[19]

Formation and breakup of Rodinia edit

Laurentia was formed in a tectonically active world.[20][3] The subduction under the southeast margin of the continent is thought to have contributed to the formation of the major supercontinent Rodinia.[18][21][22] According to the South West U.S. and East Antarctica or SWEAT hypothesis, Laurentia became the core of the supercontinent. It was rotated approximately 90 degrees clockwise compared with its modern orientation, with East Antarctica and Australia to north (what is now the west), Siberia to the east (present north), Baltica and Amazonia to the south (present east), and Congo to the southwest (present southeast). The Grenville orogen extended along the entire southwest (present southeast) margin of Laurentia, where it had collided with Congo, Amazonia, and Baltica. Laurentia lay along equator.[23]

Recent evidence suggests that South America and Africa never quite joined to Rodinia, though they were located very close to it. Newer reconstructions place Laurentia closer to its present-day orientation, with East Antarctica and Australia to the west, South China to the northwest, Baltica to the east, and Amazonia and Rio Plata to south.[24]

The breakup of Rodinia began by 780 Mya, when numerous mafic dike swarms were emplaced in western Laurentia.[25] Early stages of rifting produced the Belt Supergroup, which is over 12 kilometers (7.5 mi) thick.[26] By 750 Mya the breakup was mostly complete, and the small supercontinent of Gondwana (composed of most of today's southern continents) had rotated away from Laurentia, which was left isolated near the equator.[25]

The breakup of Rodinia may have triggered an episode of severe ice ages (the Snowball Earth hypothesis.)[24]

Pannotia and after edit

 
Pannotia 545 Ma, view centred on the South Pole.[27]

There is some evidence that the fragments of Rodinia gathered into another short-lived supercontinent, Pannotia, at the very end of the Proterozoic. This continent broke up again almost at once, and Laurentia rifted away from South America at around 565 Mya to once again become an isolated continent near the equator, separated from Gondwana by the western Iapetus Ocean. Sometime in the early Cambrian, around 530 million years ago, Argentina rifted away from Laurentia and accreted onto Gondwana.[28]

The breakup of Pannotia produced six major continents: Laurentia, Baltica, Kazakhstania, Siberia, China, and Gondwana.[29] Laurentia remained an independent continent until the middle Silurian.[10]

During the early to middle Ordovician, several volcanic arcs collided with Laurentia along what is now the Atlantic coast of North America. This caused an episode of mountain-building called the Taconic orogeny.[30] As the mountains raised by the Taconic orogeny were subsequently eroded, they produced the immense Queenston Delta, recorded in the rocks of the Queenston Formation.[29] There was also violent volcanic activity, including the eruption that produced the Millburg/Big Bentonite ash bed. About 1,140 cubic kilometers (270 cu mi) of ash was erupted in this event. However, this does not seem to have triggered any mass extinction.[31][32]

Throughout the early Paleozoic, Laurentia was characterized by a tectonically stable interior flooded by the seas, with marginal orogenic belts.[29] An important feature was the Transcontinental Arch, which ran southwest from the lowlands of the Canadian Shield. The shield and the arch were the only portions of the continent that were above water through much of the early Paleozoic.[33] There were two major marine transgressions (episodes of continental flooding) during the early Paleozoic, the Sauk and the Tippecanoe. During this time, the Western Cordillera was a passive margin.[29] Sedimentary rocks that were deposited on top of the basement complex were formed in a setting of quiet marine and river waters. The craton was covered by shallow, warm, tropical epicontinental or epicratonic sea (meaning literally "on the craton") that had maximum depths of only about 60 m (200 ft) at the shelf edge.[34]

The position of the equator during the Late Ordovician epoch (c. 458 – c.  444 million years ago) on Laurentia has been determined via extensive shell bed records.[35] Flooding of the continent that occurred during the Ordovician provided the shallow warm waters for the success of sea life and therefore a spike in the carbonate shells of shellfish. Today the beds are composed of fossilized shells or massive-bedded Thalassinoides facies (MBTF) and loose shells or nonamalgamated brachiopod shell beds (NABS).[35] These beds imply the presence of an equatorial climate belt that was hurricane free which lay inside 10° of the equator.[35] This ecological conclusion matches the previous paleomagnetic findings which confirms this equatorial location.[35]

Laurussia edit

 
Paleogeography of Earth in the middle Silurian, around 430 Ma. Avalonia and Baltica have fused with Laurentia to form Laurussia.

At the end of the Cambrian, about 490 Mya, the microcontinent of Avalonia rifted away from Gondwana. By the end of the Ordovician, Avalonia had merged with Baltica, and the two fused to Laurentia at the end of the Silurian (about 420 Mya)[30] in the Caledonian orogeny. This produced the continent of Laurussia.[30][10]

During this time, several small continental fragments merged with other margins of the craton. These included the North Slope of Alaska, which merged during the Early Devonian.[36] Several small crust fragments accreted from the late Devonian through the Mesozoic to form the Western Cordillera.[37]

The Western Cordillera became a convergent plate margin during the Ordovician, and the Transcontinental Arch became submerged, only to reappear in the Devonian.[38] The Devonian also saw the deposition of the Chattanooga Shale[39] and the Antler Orogeny in the Western Cordillera.[40]

Formation of Pangaea edit

 
Paleogeography of Earth in the late Carboniferous, around 310 Ma. Laurussia has fused with Gondwana to form Pangea.

During the Carboniferous and Permian, Laurussia fused with Gondwana to form the supercontinent of Pangaea. The resulting Alleghenian orogeny created the Central Pangean Mountains.[41][42][10] The mountains were located close to the equator and produced a year-round zone of heavy precipitation that promoted the deposition of extensive coal beds, including the Appalachian coal beds in the US.[43] Meanwhile, Gondwana had drifted onto the south pole, and cycles of extensive glaciation produced a characteristic pattern of alternating marine and coal swamp beds called cyclothems.[44]

During the Pennsylvanian, the Ancestral Rocky Mountains were raised in the southwestern part of Laurentia. This has been attributed either to either the collision with Gondwana[45] or subduction under the continental margin from the southwest.[46]

Two additional marine transgressions took place during the late Paleozoic: the Kaskaskia and Absaroka.[29]

The great continental mass of Pangaea strongly affected climate patterns.[43] The Permian was relatively arid, and evaporites were deposited in the Permian Basin.[47] Sedimentary beds deposited in the southwest in the early Triassic were fluvial in character, but gave way to eolian beds in the late Triassic.[48]

Pangaea reached its height about 250 Mya, at the start of the Triassic[49]

Breakup of Pangaea edit

The breakup of Pangaea began in the Triassic, with rifting along what is now the east coast of the US that produced red beds, arkosic sandstone, and lake shale deposits.[48] The Central Atlantic began opening at about 180 Mya.[49] Florida, which had been a part of Gondwana before the assembly of Pangaea, was left with Laurentia during the opening of the central Atlantic. This former Gondwana fragment includes the Carolina Slate belt and parts of Alabama.[10]

The Gulf of Mexico opened during the Late Triassic and Jurassic. This was accompanied by deposition of evaporite beds that later gave rise to salt domes that are important petroleum reservoirs today.[48] Europe rifted away from North America between 140 and 120 Mya,[49] and Laurentia once again became the core of an independent continent with the opening of the North Atlantic in the Paleogene.[10]

Four orogenies occurred in the Mesozoic in the Western Cordillera: the Sonoma, Nevadan, Sevier, and Laramide. The Nevadan orogeny emplaced the extensive batholiths of the Sierra Nevada.[50]

The regression of the Sundance Sea in the Late Jurassic was accompanied by deposition of the Morrison Formation, notable for its vertebrate fossils.[48]

During Cretaceous times, the Western Interior Seaway ran from the Gulf of Mexico to the Arctic Ocean, dividing North America into eastern and western land masses. From time to time, land masses or mountain chains rose up on the distant edges of the craton and then eroded down, shedding their sand across the landscape.[51] Chalk beds of the Niobrara Formation were deposited at this time, and accretion of crustal fragments continued along the Western Cordillera.[48]

In the Cenozoic edit

Northeast Mexico was added to the North American craton in relatively recent geological time. This block was formed from the Mesozoic to nearly the present day, with only small fragments of earlier basement rock. It moved as a coherent unit after the breakup of Pangaea.[10]

The Atlantic and Gulf Coasts experienced eight transgressions in Cenozoic.[52] and the Laramide orogeny continued to raise the present Rocky Mountains into the Paleocene.[52] The Western Cordillera continued to suffer tectonic deformation, including the formation of the Basin and Range Province in the middle Cenozoic and the uplift of the Colorado Plateau. The Colorado Plateau was uplifted with remarkably little deformation. The flood basalts of the Columbia Plateau were also erupted during the Cenozoic.[52]

The southwestern portion of Laurentia consists of Precambrian basement rocks deformed by continental collisions. This area has been subjected to considerable rifting as the Basin and Range Province has been stretched up to 100% of its original width.[53] The area experienced numerous large volcanic eruptions.

Baja California rifted away from North America during the Miocene.[49] This block of crust consists of Proterozoic to early Paleozoic shelf and Mesozoic arc volcano formations.[54][10]

The Holocene being an interglacial, a warm spell between episodes of extensive glaciation.[52]

Paleoenvironmental change edit

Several climate events occurred in Laurentia during the Phanerozoic eon. During the late Cambrian through the Ordovician, sea level fluctuated with ice cap melt. Nine macro scale fluctuations of "Global hyper warming", or high intensity greenhouse gas conditions, occurred.[55] Due to sea level fluctuation, these intervals led to mudstone deposits on Laurentia that act as a record of events.[55] The late Ordovician brought a cooling period, although the extent of this cooling is still debated.[56] More than 100 million years later, in the Permian, an overall warming trend occurred.[57] As indicated by fossilized invertebrates, the western margin of Laurentia was affected by a lasting southward bound cool current. This current contrasted with waters warming in the Texas region.[57] This opposition suggests that, during Permian global warm period, northern and northwestern Pangea (western Laurentia) remained relatively cool.[57]

Geological history edit

  • Around 4.03 to 3.58 Ga, the oldest intact rock formation on the planet, the Acasta Gneiss, was formed in what is now Northwest Territories (older individual mineral grains are known, but not whole rocks).[58]
  • Around 2.565 Ga, Arctica formed as an independent continent.
  • Around 2.72 to 2.45 Ga, Arctica was part of the supercontinent Kenorland.[clarification needed]
  • Around 2.1 to 1.84 Ga, when Kenorland broke apart, the Arctican craton was part of the landmass Nena along with Baltica and Eastern Antarctica.
  • Around 1.82 Ga, Laurentia was part of the supercontinent Columbia.
  • Around 1.35–1.3 Ga, Laurentia was an independent continent.
  • Around 1.3 Ga, Laurentia was part of the landmass Protorodinia.
  • Around 1.07 Ga, Laurentia was part of the supercontinent Rodinia.
  • Around 750 Ma, Laurentia was part of the landmass Protolaurasia. Laurentia nearly rifted apart.
  • In the Ediacaran (635 to 541 ±0.3 Ma), Laurentia was part of the supercontinent Pannotia.
  • In the Cambrian (541 ±0.3 to 485.4 ±1.7 Ma), Laurentia was an independent continent.
  • In the Ordovician (485.4 ± 1.7 to 443.8 ±1.5 Ma), Laurentia was shrinking and Baltica was expanding.
  • In the Devonian (419.2 ± 2.8 to 358.9 ±2.5 Ma), Laurentia collided against Baltica, forming the landmass Euramerica.
  • In the Permian (298.9 ± 0.8 to 252.17 ±0.4 Ma), all major continents collided against each other, forming the supercontinent Pangaea.
  • In the Jurassic (201.3 ± 0.6 to 145 ±4 Ma), Pangaea rifted into two landmasses: Laurasia and Gondwana. Laurentia was part of the landmass Laurasia.
  • In the Cretaceous (145 ± 4 to 66 Ma), Laurentia was an independent continent called North America.
  • In the Neogene (23.03 ± 0.05 Ma until today or ending 2.588 Ma), Laurentia, in the form of North America, collided with South America, forming the landmass America.

See also edit

References edit

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  2. ^ Dalziel, I.W.D. (1992). "On the organization of American Plates in the Neoproterozoic and the breakout of Laurentia" (PDF). GSA Today. Vol. 2, no. 11. pp. 237–241. (PDF) from the original on 17 October 2016. Retrieved 25 April 2020.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h Whitmeyer, Steven; Karlstrom, Karl E. (2007). "Tectonic model for the Proterozoic growth of North America". Geosphere. 3 (4): 220. doi:10.1130/GES00055.1.
  4. ^ Graham, Joseph (2005). "The Laurentians". Naming the Laurentians: A History of Place Names 'up North'. p. 15.
  5. ^ Levin, Harold L. (2010). The earth through time (9th ed.). Hoboken, N.J.: J. Wiley. p. 231. ISBN 978-0470387740.
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  33. ^ Levin 2010, p. 277.
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  53. ^ . USGS.gov website. Archived from the original on 25 January 2009. Retrieved 9 November 2009.
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  57. ^ a b c Clapham, Matthew E. (15 December 2010). "Faunal evidence for a cool boundary current and decoupled regional climate cooling in the Permian of western Laurentia". Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology. 298 (3): 348–359. Bibcode:2010PPP...298..348C. doi:10.1016/j.palaeo.2010.10.019.
  58. ^ Iizuka, Tsuyoshi; Komiya, Tsuyoshi; Ueno, Yuichiro; Katayama, Ikuo; Uehara, Yosuke; Maruyama, Shigenori; Hirata, Takafumi; Johnson, Simon P.; Dunkley, Daniel J. (March 2007). "Geology and zircon geochronology of the Acasta Gneiss Complex, northwestern Canada: New constraints on its tectonothermal history". Precambrian Research. 153 (3–4): 179–208. Bibcode:2007PreR..153..179I. doi:10.1016/j.precamres.2006.11.017.

Works cited edit

  • Goodge, J. W.; Vervoort, J. D.; Fanning, C. M.; Brecke, D. M.; Farmer, G. L.; Williams, I. S.; Myrow, P. M.; DePaolo, D. J. (2008). "A positive test of East Antarctica–Laurentia juxtaposition within the Rodinia supercontinent" (PDF). Science. 321 (5886): 235–240. Bibcode:2008Sci...321..235G. doi:10.1126/science.1159189. ISSN 0036-8075. PMID 18621666. S2CID 11799613. Retrieved 4 February 2016.
  • Loewy, S. L.; Dalziel, I. W. D.; Pisarevsky, S.; Connelly, J. N.; Tait, J.; Hanson, R. E.; Bullen, D. (2011). "Coats Land crustal block, East Antarctica: A tectonic tracer for Laurentia?". Geology. 39 (9): 859–862. Bibcode:2011Geo....39..859L. doi:10.1130/G32029.1. Retrieved 24 January 2016.

External links edit

  • , paleogeographic history of southwestern Laurentia, goes back to 1.7 billion years ago.
  • – Paleogeographic history of western Laurentia, goes back to the Permian period.
  • The Dynamic Earth, United Plates of America 6 March 2005 at the Wayback Machine from The Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History
  • Map of Laurentia 5 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine

laurentia, surname, laurentum, bioregion, same, name, bioregion, saint, palatias, other, uses, disambiguation, north, american, craton, large, continental, craton, that, forms, ancient, geological, core, north, america, many, times, past, been, separate, conti. For the use of the surname Laurentia see Laurentum For the bioregion of the same name see Laurentia bioregion For the saint see Palatias and Laurentia For other uses see Laurentia disambiguation Laurentia or the North American Craton is a large continental craton that forms the ancient geological core of North America Many times in its past Laurentia has been a separate continent as it is now in the form of North America although originally it also included the cratonic areas of Greenland and also the northwestern part of Scotland known as the Hebridean Terrane During other times in its past Laurentia has been part of larger continents and supercontinents and itself consists of many smaller terranes assembled on a network of Early Proterozoic orogenic belts Small microcontinents and oceanic islands collided with and sutured onto the ever growing Laurentia and together formed the stable Precambrian craton seen today 1 2 3 Laurentia also called the North American cratonThe craton is named after the Laurentian Shield through the Laurentian Mountains which received their name from the Saint Lawrence River named after Lawrence of Rome 4 Contents 1 Interior platform 2 Tectonic history 2 1 Assembly 2 2 Formation and breakup of Rodinia 2 3 Pannotia and after 2 4 Laurussia 2 5 Formation of Pangaea 2 6 Breakup of Pangaea 2 7 In the Cenozoic 3 Paleoenvironmental change 4 Geological history 5 See also 6 References 6 1 Works cited 7 External linksInterior platform editIn eastern and central Canada much of the stable craton is exposed at the surface as the Canadian Shield an area of Precambrian rock covering over a million square miles This includes some of the oldest rock on Earth such as the Archean rock of the Acasta Gneiss of Canada which is 4 04 billion years Ga old and the Istaq Gneiss Complex of Greenland which is 3 8 billion years old 5 When subsurface extensions are considered the wider term Laurentian Shield is more common not least because large parts of the structure extend outside Canada In the United States the craton bedrock is covered with sedimentary rocks on the broad interior platform in the Midwest and Great Plains regions and is exposed only in northern Minnesota Wisconsin the New York Adirondacks and the Upper Peninsula of Michigan 6 The sequence of sedimentary rocks varies from about 1 000 m to in excess of 6 100 m 3 500 20 000 ft in thickness The cratonic rocks are metamorphic or igneous with the overlying sedimentary layers composed mostly of limestones sandstones and shales 7 These sedimentary rocks were largely deposited from 650 to 290 million years ago 8 The oldest bedrock assigned to the Archean Slave Rae Hearne Wyoming Superior and Nain Provinces is located in the northern two thirds of Laurentia During the Early Proterozoic they were covered by sediments most of which has now been eroded away 1 Greenland is part of Laurentia The island is now separated from the mainland of North America by the Nares Strait but this is a Pleistocene erosional feature The strait is floored with continental crust and shows no indications of a thermal event or seaway tectonism 9 10 Greenland is composed mostly of crust of Archean to Proterozoic age with lower Paleocene shelf formations on its northern margin and Devonian to Paleogene formations on its western and eastern margins The eastern and northern margins were heavily deformed during the Caledonian orogeny 11 10 The Isua Greenstone Belt of western Greenland preserves oceanic crust containing sheeted dike complexes These provide evidence to geologists that mid ocean ridges existed 3 8 Gya The Abitibi gold belt in the Superior Province is the largest greenstone belt in the Canadian Shield 12 Tectonic history editAssembly edit nbsp Laurentia basement rocksLaurentia first assembled from six or seven large fragments of Archean crust at around 2 0 to 1 8 Gya 3 13 The assembly began when the Slave craton collided with Rae Hearne craton and the Rae Hearne craton collided shortly after with the Superior Craton These then merged with several smaller fragments of Archean crust including the Wyoming Medicine Hat Sask Marshfield and Nain blocks This series of collisions raised the mountains of the Trans Hudson orogenic belt which likely were similar to the modern Himalayas 3 and the Wopmay orogen of northwest Canada 14 During the assembly of the core of Laurentia banded iron formation was deposited in Michigan Minnesota and Labrador 15 The resulting nucleus of Laurentia was mostly reworked Archean crust but with some juvenile crust in the form of volcanic arc belts Juvenile crust is crust formed from magma freshly extracted from the Earth s mantle rather than recycled from older crustal rock 3 The intense mountain building of the Trans Hudson orogeny also formed thick stable roots beneath the craton 3 possibly by a process of kneading that allowed low density material to move up and high density material to move down 16 Over the next 900 million years Laurentia grew by the accretion of island arcs and other juvenile crust and occasional fragments of older crust such as the Mojave block This accretion occurred along the southeastern margin of Laurentia where there was a long lived convergent plate boundary Major accretion episodes included the Yavapai orogeny at 1 71 to 1 68 Gya which welded the 1 8 to 1 7 Ga Yavapai province to Laurentia the Mazatzal orogeny at 1 65 to 1 60 Gya accreting the 1 71 to 1 65 Ga Mazatzal province 3 the Picuris orogeny at 1 49 to 1 45 Gya 17 which may have welded the 1 50 to 1 30 Ga Granite Rhyolite province to Laurentia and the Grenville orogeny at 1 30 to 0 95 Gya which accreted the 1 30 to 1 00 Ga Llano Grenville province to Laurentia The Picuris orogeny in particular was characterized by the intrusion of great volumes of granitoid magma into the juvenile crust which helped mature the crust and stitch it together Slab rollback at 1 70 and 1 65 Gya deposited characteristic quartzite rhyolite beds on the southern margin of the craton This long episode of accretion doubled the size of Laurentia but produced craton underlain by relatively weak hydrous and fertile ripe for extraction of magma mantle lithosphere 3 The subduction under the southeast margin of the continent likely caused enrichment of the lithospheric mantle beneath the orogenic belts of the Grenville Province 18 Around 1 1 Gya the center of the craton nearly rifted apart along the Midcontinent Rift System This produced the Keweenawan Supergroup whose flood basalts are rich in copper ore 19 Formation and breakup of Rodinia edit Laurentia was formed in a tectonically active world 20 3 The subduction under the southeast margin of the continent is thought to have contributed to the formation of the major supercontinent Rodinia 18 21 22 According to the South West U S and East Antarctica or SWEAT hypothesis Laurentia became the core of the supercontinent It was rotated approximately 90 degrees clockwise compared with its modern orientation with East Antarctica and Australia to north what is now the west Siberia to the east present north Baltica and Amazonia to the south present east and Congo to the southwest present southeast The Grenville orogen extended along the entire southwest present southeast margin of Laurentia where it had collided with Congo Amazonia and Baltica Laurentia lay along equator 23 Recent evidence suggests that South America and Africa never quite joined to Rodinia though they were located very close to it Newer reconstructions place Laurentia closer to its present day orientation with East Antarctica and Australia to the west South China to the northwest Baltica to the east and Amazonia and Rio Plata to south 24 The breakup of Rodinia began by 780 Mya when numerous mafic dike swarms were emplaced in western Laurentia 25 Early stages of rifting produced the Belt Supergroup which is over 12 kilometers 7 5 mi thick 26 By 750 Mya the breakup was mostly complete and the small supercontinent of Gondwana composed of most of today s southern continents had rotated away from Laurentia which was left isolated near the equator 25 The breakup of Rodinia may have triggered an episode of severe ice ages the Snowball Earth hypothesis 24 Pannotia and after edit nbsp Pannotia 545 Ma view centred on the South Pole 27 There is some evidence that the fragments of Rodinia gathered into another short lived supercontinent Pannotia at the very end of the Proterozoic This continent broke up again almost at once and Laurentia rifted away from South America at around 565 Mya to once again become an isolated continent near the equator separated from Gondwana by the western Iapetus Ocean Sometime in the early Cambrian around 530 million years ago Argentina rifted away from Laurentia and accreted onto Gondwana 28 The breakup of Pannotia produced six major continents Laurentia Baltica Kazakhstania Siberia China and Gondwana 29 Laurentia remained an independent continent until the middle Silurian 10 During the early to middle Ordovician several volcanic arcs collided with Laurentia along what is now the Atlantic coast of North America This caused an episode of mountain building called the Taconic orogeny 30 As the mountains raised by the Taconic orogeny were subsequently eroded they produced the immense Queenston Delta recorded in the rocks of the Queenston Formation 29 There was also violent volcanic activity including the eruption that produced the Millburg Big Bentonite ash bed About 1 140 cubic kilometers 270 cu mi of ash was erupted in this event However this does not seem to have triggered any mass extinction 31 32 Throughout the early Paleozoic Laurentia was characterized by a tectonically stable interior flooded by the seas with marginal orogenic belts 29 An important feature was the Transcontinental Arch which ran southwest from the lowlands of the Canadian Shield The shield and the arch were the only portions of the continent that were above water through much of the early Paleozoic 33 There were two major marine transgressions episodes of continental flooding during the early Paleozoic the Sauk and the Tippecanoe During this time the Western Cordillera was a passive margin 29 Sedimentary rocks that were deposited on top of the basement complex were formed in a setting of quiet marine and river waters The craton was covered by shallow warm tropical epicontinental or epicratonic sea meaning literally on the craton that had maximum depths of only about 60 m 200 ft at the shelf edge 34 The position of the equator during the Late Ordovician epoch c 458 c 444 million years ago on Laurentia has been determined via extensive shell bed records 35 Flooding of the continent that occurred during the Ordovician provided the shallow warm waters for the success of sea life and therefore a spike in the carbonate shells of shellfish Today the beds are composed of fossilized shells or massive bedded Thalassinoides facies MBTF and loose shells or nonamalgamated brachiopod shell beds NABS 35 These beds imply the presence of an equatorial climate belt that was hurricane free which lay inside 10 of the equator 35 This ecological conclusion matches the previous paleomagnetic findings which confirms this equatorial location 35 Laurussia edit nbsp Paleogeography of Earth in the middle Silurian around 430 Ma Avalonia and Baltica have fused with Laurentia to form Laurussia At the end of the Cambrian about 490 Mya the microcontinent of Avalonia rifted away from Gondwana By the end of the Ordovician Avalonia had merged with Baltica and the two fused to Laurentia at the end of the Silurian about 420 Mya 30 in the Caledonian orogeny This produced the continent of Laurussia 30 10 During this time several small continental fragments merged with other margins of the craton These included the North Slope of Alaska which merged during the Early Devonian 36 Several small crust fragments accreted from the late Devonian through the Mesozoic to form the Western Cordillera 37 The Western Cordillera became a convergent plate margin during the Ordovician and the Transcontinental Arch became submerged only to reappear in the Devonian 38 The Devonian also saw the deposition of the Chattanooga Shale 39 and the Antler Orogeny in the Western Cordillera 40 Formation of Pangaea edit nbsp Paleogeography of Earth in the late Carboniferous around 310 Ma Laurussia has fused with Gondwana to form Pangea During the Carboniferous and Permian Laurussia fused with Gondwana to form the supercontinent of Pangaea The resulting Alleghenian orogeny created the Central Pangean Mountains 41 42 10 The mountains were located close to the equator and produced a year round zone of heavy precipitation that promoted the deposition of extensive coal beds including the Appalachian coal beds in the US 43 Meanwhile Gondwana had drifted onto the south pole and cycles of extensive glaciation produced a characteristic pattern of alternating marine and coal swamp beds called cyclothems 44 During the Pennsylvanian the Ancestral Rocky Mountains were raised in the southwestern part of Laurentia This has been attributed either to either the collision with Gondwana 45 or subduction under the continental margin from the southwest 46 Two additional marine transgressions took place during the late Paleozoic the Kaskaskia and Absaroka 29 The great continental mass of Pangaea strongly affected climate patterns 43 The Permian was relatively arid and evaporites were deposited in the Permian Basin 47 Sedimentary beds deposited in the southwest in the early Triassic were fluvial in character but gave way to eolian beds in the late Triassic 48 Pangaea reached its height about 250 Mya at the start of the Triassic 49 Breakup of Pangaea edit The breakup of Pangaea began in the Triassic with rifting along what is now the east coast of the US that produced red beds arkosic sandstone and lake shale deposits 48 The Central Atlantic began opening at about 180 Mya 49 Florida which had been a part of Gondwana before the assembly of Pangaea was left with Laurentia during the opening of the central Atlantic This former Gondwana fragment includes the Carolina Slate belt and parts of Alabama 10 The Gulf of Mexico opened during the Late Triassic and Jurassic This was accompanied by deposition of evaporite beds that later gave rise to salt domes that are important petroleum reservoirs today 48 Europe rifted away from North America between 140 and 120 Mya 49 and Laurentia once again became the core of an independent continent with the opening of the North Atlantic in the Paleogene 10 Four orogenies occurred in the Mesozoic in the Western Cordillera the Sonoma Nevadan Sevier and Laramide The Nevadan orogeny emplaced the extensive batholiths of the Sierra Nevada 50 The regression of the Sundance Sea in the Late Jurassic was accompanied by deposition of the Morrison Formation notable for its vertebrate fossils 48 During Cretaceous times the Western Interior Seaway ran from the Gulf of Mexico to the Arctic Ocean dividing North America into eastern and western land masses From time to time land masses or mountain chains rose up on the distant edges of the craton and then eroded down shedding their sand across the landscape 51 Chalk beds of the Niobrara Formation were deposited at this time and accretion of crustal fragments continued along the Western Cordillera 48 In the Cenozoic edit Northeast Mexico was added to the North American craton in relatively recent geological time This block was formed from the Mesozoic to nearly the present day with only small fragments of earlier basement rock It moved as a coherent unit after the breakup of Pangaea 10 The Atlantic and Gulf Coasts experienced eight transgressions in Cenozoic 52 and the Laramide orogeny continued to raise the present Rocky Mountains into the Paleocene 52 The Western Cordillera continued to suffer tectonic deformation including the formation of the Basin and Range Province in the middle Cenozoic and the uplift of the Colorado Plateau The Colorado Plateau was uplifted with remarkably little deformation The flood basalts of the Columbia Plateau were also erupted during the Cenozoic 52 The southwestern portion of Laurentia consists of Precambrian basement rocks deformed by continental collisions This area has been subjected to considerable rifting as the Basin and Range Province has been stretched up to 100 of its original width 53 The area experienced numerous large volcanic eruptions Baja California rifted away from North America during the Miocene 49 This block of crust consists of Proterozoic to early Paleozoic shelf and Mesozoic arc volcano formations 54 10 The Holocene being an interglacial a warm spell between episodes of extensive glaciation 52 Paleoenvironmental change editSeveral climate events occurred in Laurentia during the Phanerozoic eon During the late Cambrian through the Ordovician sea level fluctuated with ice cap melt Nine macro scale fluctuations of Global hyper warming or high intensity greenhouse gas conditions occurred 55 Due to sea level fluctuation these intervals led to mudstone deposits on Laurentia that act as a record of events 55 The late Ordovician brought a cooling period although the extent of this cooling is still debated 56 More than 100 million years later in the Permian an overall warming trend occurred 57 As indicated by fossilized invertebrates the western margin of Laurentia was affected by a lasting southward bound cool current This current contrasted with waters warming in the Texas region 57 This opposition suggests that during Permian global warm period northern and northwestern Pangea western Laurentia remained relatively cool 57 Geological history editAround 4 03 to 3 58 Ga the oldest intact rock formation on the planet the Acasta Gneiss was formed in what is now Northwest Territories older individual mineral grains are known but not whole rocks 58 Around 2 565 Ga Arctica formed as an independent continent Around 2 72 to 2 45 Ga Arctica was part of the supercontinent Kenorland clarification needed Around 2 1 to 1 84 Ga when Kenorland broke apart the Arctican craton was part of the landmass Nena along with Baltica and Eastern Antarctica Around 1 82 Ga Laurentia was part of the supercontinent Columbia Around 1 35 1 3 Ga Laurentia was an independent continent Around 1 3 Ga Laurentia was part of the landmass Protorodinia Around 1 07 Ga Laurentia was part of the supercontinent Rodinia Around 750 Ma Laurentia was part of the landmass Protolaurasia Laurentia nearly rifted apart In the Ediacaran 635 to 541 0 3 Ma Laurentia was part of the supercontinent Pannotia In the Cambrian 541 0 3 to 485 4 1 7 Ma Laurentia was an independent continent In the Ordovician 485 4 1 7 to 443 8 1 5 Ma Laurentia was shrinking and Baltica was expanding In the Devonian 419 2 2 8 to 358 9 2 5 Ma Laurentia collided against Baltica forming the landmass Euramerica In the Permian 298 9 0 8 to 252 17 0 4 Ma all major continents collided against each other forming the supercontinent Pangaea In the Jurassic 201 3 0 6 to 145 4 Ma Pangaea rifted into two landmasses Laurasia and Gondwana Laurentia was part of the landmass Laurasia In the Cretaceous 145 4 to 66 Ma Laurentia was an independent continent called North America In the Neogene 23 03 0 05 Ma until today or ending 2 588 Ma Laurentia in the form of North America collided with South America forming the landmass America See also editNorth Atlantic Craton Archaean craton exposed in Greenland Labrador and northwestern ScotlandReferences edit a b Hoffman Paul F 1988 United Plates of America The Birth of a Craton Early Proterozoic Assembly and Growth of Laurentia Annual Review of Earth and Planetary Sciences 16 543 603 Bibcode 1988AREPS 16 543H doi 10 1146 annurev ea 16 050188 002551 Archived from the original on 7 September 2020 Retrieved 25 April 2020 Dalziel I W D 1992 On the organization of American Plates in the Neoproterozoic and the breakout of Laurentia PDF GSA Today Vol 2 no 11 pp 237 241 Archived PDF from the original on 17 October 2016 Retrieved 25 April 2020 a b c d e f g h Whitmeyer Steven Karlstrom Karl E 2007 Tectonic model for the Proterozoic growth of North America Geosphere 3 4 220 doi 10 1130 GES00055 1 Graham Joseph 2005 The Laurentians Naming the Laurentians A History of Place Names up North p 15 Levin Harold L 2010 The earth through time 9th ed Hoboken N J J Wiley p 231 ISBN 978 0470387740 Fisher J H et al 1988 Michigan basin Chapter 13 The Geology of North America Sedimentary cover North American Craton Vol D 2 pp 361 382 Sloss L L 1988 Conclusions Chapter 17 The Geology of North America Sedimentary cover North American Craton Vol D 2 pp 493 496 Burgess P M Gurnis M Moresi L 1997 Formation of sequences in the cratonic interior of North America by interaction between mantle eustatic and stratigraphic processes Geological Society of America Bulletin 109 12 1515 1535 Bibcode 1997GSAB 109 1515B doi 10 1130 0016 7606 1997 109 lt 1515 FOSITC gt 2 3 CO 2 S2CID 140723924 Dawes Peter R February 2009 Precambrian Palaeozoic geology of Smith Sound Canada and Greenland key constraint to palaeogeographic reconstructions of northern Laurentia and the North Atlantic region Terra Nova 21 1 1 13 Bibcode 2009TeNov 21 1D doi 10 1111 j 1365 3121 2008 00845 x S2CID 128703747 a b c d e f g h i Torsvik amp Cocks 2017 p 41 Higgins A K Gilotti J A Smith M P eds 2008 The Greenland Caledonides Evolution of the Northeast Margin of Laurentia United States Geological Society of America ISBN 9780813712024 Retrieved 22 January 2022 Levin 2010 p 234 238 239 Torsvik Trond H Cocks L Robin M 2017 Earth history and palaeogeography Cambridge United Kingdom Cambridge University Press p 41 ISBN 9781107105324 Levin 2010 pp 251 253 Levin 2010 pp 229 230 Petit Charles 18 December 2010 Continental Hearts Science News Society for Science amp the Public 178 13 22 26 doi 10 1002 scin 5591781325 ISSN 0036 8423 Daniel Christopher G and co authors 2013 Detrital zircon evidence for non Laurentian provenance Mesoproterozoic ca 1490 1450 Ma deposition and orogenesis in a reconstructed orogenic belt northern New Mexico USA Defining the Picuris orogeny GSA Bulletin p 1423 a b Chiarenzelli J Lupulescu M Cousens B Thern E Coffin L Regan S 2010 Enriched Grenvillian lithospheric mantle as a consequence of long lived subduction beneath Laurentia PDF Geology 38 2 151 154 Bibcode 2010Geo 38 151C doi 10 1130 g30342 1 Archived PDF from the original on 7 September 2020 Retrieved 24 April 2020 Levin 2010 pp 255 256 Arlo B Weil Rob Van der Voo Conall Mac Niocaill Joseph G Meert January 1998 The Proterozoic supercontinent Rodinia paleomagnetically derived reconstructions for 1100 to 800 Ma Earth and Planetary Science Letters 154 1 4 13 24 Bibcode 1998E amp PSL 154 13W doi 10 1016 S0012 821X 97 00127 1 Xie Xiangyang Manger Walter L February 2022 Early Carboniferous Mississippian intertwining sediment dispersal network across the Laurentian cratonic interior Sedimentary Geology 428 106064 Bibcode 2022SedG 42806064X doi 10 1016 j sedgeo 2021 106064 S2CID 245416564 Levin 2010 pp 256 257 Kearey P Klepeis K A Vine F J 2009 Global tectonics 3rd ed Oxford Wiley Blackwell pp 370 371 ISBN 9781405107778 a b Kearey Klepeis amp Vine 2009 pp 372 373 a b Kearey Klepeis amp Vine 2009 pp 371 373 Levin 2010 p 258 Dalziel I W 1997 Neoproterozoic Paleozoic geography and tectonics Review hypothesis environmental speculation Geological Society of America Bulletin 109 1 31 Bibcode 1997GSAB 109 16D doi 10 1130 0016 7606 1997 109 lt 0016 ONPGAT gt 2 3 CO 2 Kearey Klepeis amp Vine 2009 pp 374 377 a b c d e Levin 2010 p 273 a b c Kearey Klepeis amp Vine 2009 p 376 Huff Warren D Bergstrom Stig M Kolata Dennis R 1 October 1992 Gigantic Ordovician volcanic ash fall in North America and Europe Biological tectonomagmatic and event stratigraphic significance Geology 20 10 875 878 Bibcode 1992Geo 20 875H doi 10 1130 0091 7613 1992 020 lt 0875 GOVAFI gt 2 3 CO 2 Levin 2010 p 290 Levin 2010 p 277 Menard W William ed 1979 The Mississippian and Pennsylvanian Carboniferous systems in the United States U S Geological Survey Professional Paper Professional Paper 1110 M DD doi 10 3133 pp1110MDD a b c d Jin J Harper D A T Cocks L R M McCausland P J A Rasmussen C M O Sheehan P M 2013 Precisely locating the Ordovician equator in Laurentia Geology 41 2 107 110 Bibcode 2013Geo 41 107J doi 10 1130 g33688 1 Archived from the original on 30 June 2017 Retrieved 14 June 2017 Cocks L Robin M Torsvik Trond H May 2011 The Palaeozoic geography of Laurentia and western Laurussia A stable craton with mobile margins Earth Science Reviews 106 1 2 1 51 Bibcode 2011ESRv 106 1C doi 10 1016 j earscirev 2011 01 007 Torsvik amp Cocks 2017 pp 44 46 Levin 2010 p 273 305 Levin 2010 p 304 Levin 2010 p 306 Kearey Klepeis amp Vine 2009 p 377 Ziegler Peter A 1989 Evolution of Laurussia a Study in Late Palaeozoic Plate Tectonics Dordrecht Springer Netherlands ISBN 9789400904699 a b Otto Bliesner Bette L 15 September 1993 Tropical mountains and coal formation A climate model study of the Westphalian 306 MA Geophysical Research Letters 20 18 1947 1950 Bibcode 1993GeoRL 20 1947O doi 10 1029 93GL02235 Levin 2010 p 301 Levin 2010 p 307 Fillmore Robert 2010 Geological evolution of the Colorado Plateau of eastern Utah and western Colorado including the San Juan River Natural Bridges Canyonlands Arches and the Book Cliffs Salt Lake City University of Utah Press pp 33 34 ISBN 9781607810049 Levin 2010 pp 312 313 a b c d e Levin 2010 p 381 a b c d Kearey Klepeis amp Vine 2009 p 378 Levin 2010 pp 382 397 Slattery J S Cobban W A McKinney K C Harries P J Sandness A L 2015 Early Cretaceous to Paleocene paleogeography of the Western Interior Seaway the interaction of eustasy and tectonism Wyoming Geological Association Guidebook 22 60 Retrieved 17 January 2022 a b c d Levin 2010 p 465 Geologic Provinces of the United States Basin and Range Province on USGS gov website Archived from the original on 25 January 2009 Retrieved 9 November 2009 Sedlock R L 2003 Geology and tectonics of the Baja California peninsula and adjacent areas Tectonic Evolution of Northwestern Mexico and the Southwestern USA Geological Society of America pp 1 42 ISBN 9780813723747 Retrieved 22 January 2022 a b Landing Ed 15 December 2012 Time specific black mudstones and global hyperwarming on the Cambrian Ordovician slope and shelf of the Laurentia palaeocontinent Palaeogeography Palaeoclimatology Palaeoecology Special Issue Time Specific Facies the color and texture of biotic events 367 256 272 Bibcode 2012PPP 367 256L doi 10 1016 j palaeo 2011 09 005 Rosenau Nicholas A Herrmann Achim D Leslie Stephen A 15 January 2012 Conodont apatite d18O values from a platform margin setting Oklahoma USA Implications for initiation of Late Ordovician icehouse conditions Palaeogeography Palaeoclimatology Palaeoecology 315 172 180 Bibcode 2012PPP 315 172R doi 10 1016 j palaeo 2011 12 003 a b c Clapham Matthew E 15 December 2010 Faunal evidence for a cool boundary current and decoupled regional climate cooling in the Permian of western Laurentia Palaeogeography Palaeoclimatology Palaeoecology 298 3 348 359 Bibcode 2010PPP 298 348C doi 10 1016 j palaeo 2010 10 019 Iizuka Tsuyoshi Komiya Tsuyoshi Ueno Yuichiro Katayama Ikuo Uehara Yosuke Maruyama Shigenori Hirata Takafumi Johnson Simon P Dunkley Daniel J March 2007 Geology and zircon geochronology of the Acasta Gneiss Complex northwestern Canada New constraints on its tectonothermal history Precambrian Research 153 3 4 179 208 Bibcode 2007PreR 153 179I doi 10 1016 j precamres 2006 11 017 Works cited edit Goodge J W Vervoort J D Fanning C M Brecke D M Farmer G L Williams I S Myrow P M DePaolo D J 2008 A positive test of East Antarctica Laurentia juxtaposition within the Rodinia supercontinent PDF Science 321 5886 235 240 Bibcode 2008Sci 321 235G doi 10 1126 science 1159189 ISSN 0036 8075 PMID 18621666 S2CID 11799613 Retrieved 4 February 2016 Loewy S L Dalziel I W D Pisarevsky S Connelly J N Tait J Hanson R E Bullen D 2011 Coats Land crustal block East Antarctica A tectonic tracer for Laurentia Geology 39 9 859 862 Bibcode 2011Geo 39 859L doi 10 1130 G32029 1 Retrieved 24 January 2016 External links editPaleogeography of the Southwestern US paleogeographic history of southwestern Laurentia goes back to 1 7 billion years ago Mesozoic Paleogeography and Tectonic History Western North America Paleogeographic history of western Laurentia goes back to the Permian period USGS Interior Plains Region web site The Dynamic Earth United Plates of America Archived 6 March 2005 at the Wayback Machine from The Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History Map of Laurentia Archived 5 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Laurentia amp oldid 1186235192, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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