Berger, Julien et al. (2006): A Variscan slow-spreading ridge (MOR-LHOT) in Limousin (French Massif Central); magmatic evolution and tectonic setting inferred from mineral chemistry

Leg/Site/Hole:
Identifier:
2006-055296
georefid

10.1180/0026461067020322
doi

Creator:
Berger, Julien
Africa Museum, Section de Geologie Isotopique, Tervuren, Belgium
author

Femenias, O.
Universite Libre de Bruxelles, Belgium
author

Mercier, J. C. C.
Universite de La Rochelle, France
author

Demaiffe, D.
author

Identification:
A Variscan slow-spreading ridge (MOR-LHOT) in Limousin (French Massif Central); magmatic evolution and tectonic setting inferred from mineral chemistry
2006
Mineralogical Magazine
Mineralogical Society, London, United Kingdom
70
2
175-185
The Limousin ophiolite (French Massif Central) occurs as elongate bodies forming a (nearly) continuous suture zone between two major lithotectonic units of the French Variscan belt. The mantle section of the ophiolite is made of diopside-bearing harzburgite, harzburgite and dunite characteristic of a lherzolite-harzburgite ophiolite type (LHOT). The plutonic section is essentially composed of troctolites, wehrlites and gabbros locally intruded by ilmenite-rich mafic dykes. All the rocks were strongly affected by an ocean-floor hydrothermal metamorphism. The composition and evolution of primary magmatic phases (olivine, clinopyroxene, plagioclase and spinel) throughout the lowermost magmatic sequence correspond to those described in oceanic cumulates (ODP data). The Limousin ophiolite is thus of MOR type instead of SSZ type. The whole lithological section, the mineral chemistry, the extensive hydrothermal oceanic alteration and the relatively thin crustal section are typical of a slow-spreading ridge ocean (i.e. Mid-Atlantic ridge). Comparison of the Limousin ophiolite with other ophiolites from European Variscides suggests that the oceanic domain was actively spreading during the Late Palaeozoic and extended from the Armorican massif to the Polish Sudetes.
English
Coverage:Geographic coordinates:
North:46.1000
West:0.3000East: 3.0000
South:45.0000

Igneous and metamorphic petrology; Solid-earth geophysics; Armorican Massif; Central Europe; Central Massif; chain silicates; clinopyroxene; dikes; diopside; Europe; feldspar group; framework silicates; France; gabbros; harzburgite; hydrothermal conditions; igneous rocks; ilmenite; intrusions; lherzolite; Limousin; mid-ocean ridges; mineral assemblages; nesosilicates; Ocean Drilling Program; ocean floors; olivine; olivine group; ophiolite; ophiolite complexes; orthosilicates; oxides; Paleozoic; peridotites; plagioclase; plutonic rocks; Poland; Polish Sudeten Mountains; pyroxene group; sea-floor spreading; silicates; spinel; Sudeten Mountains; troctolite; ultramafics; upper Paleozoic; Variscides; Western Europe;

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