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Proterozoic and cambrian successions in upper Silesia : An avalonian terrane in Southern Poland

By: Moczydłowska, M.
Material type: ArticleArticleDescription: 679-689pp.Subject(s): Avalonia - Southern Poland | Depositional environment | Proterozoic | Cambrian | Lithofacies | Siliciclastic | Trilobitemorpha In: Geological magazine : Vol. 134 Iss. 1-6 Year. 1997Summary: All Cambrian series and several Cambrian biozones have been recognized using acritarch biochronology within the siliciclastic successions underlying Upper Silesia in southern Poland. The entire Cambrian succession is around 580 m thick and contains rare Lower Cambrian trilobites of the Acado-Baltic faunal province. Acritarch associations are taxonomically comparable to those recorded in Baltica, Laurentia and Gondwana, but their closest taxonomic affinity is with Iberia. The Cambrian succession accumulated in a shallow shelf environment and is almost flat-lying, unmetamorphosed, uncleaved and in normal stratigraphic order. It underlies paraconformably Lower Devonian deposits and overlies unconformably steeply dipping metasediments of undetermined Precambrian age. Tectonic deformation and metamorphism to greenschist grade in these Precambrian strata must have occurred in the Proterozoic, and are attributed to the Cadomian orogeny because similar Cadomian basement complexes occur in the adjoining Brno Massif and in the East Avalonian and Armorican terranes. Upper Silesia appears to be a stable crustal block bordered by deep faults whose sedimentary cover has not been affected by tectonic deformation other than faulting. Based on the recognition of Cadomian age basement, the distribution of trilobites and acritarchs and the tectonostratigraphic relationships to adjacent areas, the Upper Silesia terrane is interpreted to be a distal segment of East Avalonia that in Cambrian times faced Iberia. An extension of the Tornquist Suture from the Intra-Sudetic Fault is seen in the Kraków-Myszków Fault Zone at the margin of Upper Silesia. The Intra-Sudetic Fault zone and the Kraków-Myszków Fault Zone contain Early Palaeozoic rocks deformed during the Caledonian orogeny, and mark the boundary between the Caledonian accretionary belt and areas unaffected by this orogeny.
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All Cambrian series and several Cambrian biozones have been recognized using acritarch biochronology within the siliciclastic successions underlying Upper Silesia in southern Poland. The entire Cambrian succession is around 580 m thick and contains rare Lower Cambrian trilobites of the Acado-Baltic faunal province. Acritarch associations are taxonomically comparable to those recorded in Baltica, Laurentia and Gondwana, but their closest taxonomic affinity is with Iberia. The Cambrian succession accumulated in a shallow shelf environment and is almost flat-lying, unmetamorphosed, uncleaved and in normal stratigraphic order. It underlies paraconformably Lower Devonian deposits and overlies unconformably steeply dipping metasediments of undetermined Precambrian age. Tectonic deformation and metamorphism to greenschist grade in these Precambrian strata must have occurred in the Proterozoic, and are attributed to the Cadomian orogeny because similar Cadomian basement complexes occur in the adjoining Brno Massif and in the East Avalonian and Armorican terranes. Upper Silesia appears to be a stable crustal block bordered by deep faults whose sedimentary cover has not been affected by tectonic deformation other than faulting. Based on the recognition of Cadomian age basement, the distribution of trilobites and acritarchs and the tectonostratigraphic relationships to adjacent areas, the Upper Silesia terrane is interpreted to be a distal segment of East Avalonia that in Cambrian times faced Iberia. An extension of the Tornquist Suture from the Intra-Sudetic Fault is seen in the Kraków-Myszków Fault Zone at the margin of Upper Silesia. The Intra-Sudetic Fault zone and the Kraków-Myszków Fault Zone contain Early Palaeozoic rocks deformed during the Caledonian orogeny, and mark the boundary between the Caledonian accretionary belt and areas unaffected by this orogeny.

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