大西洋关闭后又重新开放了吗?:评论

IF 1.8 4区 地球科学 Q3 GEOSCIENCES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY Geoscience Canada Pub Date : 2016-12-15 DOI:10.12789/GEOCANJ.2016.43.109
H. Williams
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引用次数: 4

摘要

图佐·威尔逊1966年发表在《自然》杂志上的一篇题为《大西洋关闭后又重新开放了吗?》确实是阿巴拉契亚造山带演化思想史上的重要转折点。一百年来,阿巴拉契亚造山带是典型的地槽,阿巴拉契亚的演化被认为是固定的地槽发展模式。对比鲜明的动物领域一直是神秘的,从来没有被陆地屏障的概念正确地解释过。同样令人费解的是纽芬兰岛横断面的对称性和双面性,它驳斥了固定主义的观点,即大陆像树木一样生长,是通过向外增加不对称的外围环来实现的。关闭原大西洋,然后重新打开大西洋的威尔逊循环为这些谜题提供了一个优雅而简单的解决方案。威尔逊意识到,在原大西洋的北美一侧存在着岛弧,比如现在纽芬兰的圣母院亚区,而主要的动物边界位于这些火山岩的东部。他还意识到,早古生代大陆可能在奥陶世中期接触过,“……因为从此以后,大西洋和太平洋的动物界就没有区别了。”在奥陶纪中后期,一个大陆对另一个大陆的侵占解释了查尔斯·舒彻特和马歇尔·凯的前边界概念。同样,凯的岛弧在奥陶纪早期最为明显,那是原大西洋大闭合时期。威尔逊还发现了海洋闭合的不规则性,这种不规则性首先发生在海岬,然后发生在重新进入的海域,由此产生的碎屑楔,以及从古生代早期海洋环境到古生代中晚期陆地环境的总体变化。Taconic allothon也是他的海洋封闭场景的一部分。原始大西洋在古生代末期完全关闭,大西洋的主要扩张始于白垩纪。威尔逊接着沿着从斯匹次卑尔根到佛罗里达的阿巴拉契亚-加里多尼亚链的长度,沿着原大西洋的路线继续前进。这不是一项简单的任务。令人鼓舞的是,当时对纽芬兰的分析支持了他的观点,甚至图佐也很难沿着新英格兰部分找到缝合线。西北非洲很容易被容纳为海西造山带,在某些方面与南部阿巴拉契亚山脉对称。威尔逊周期的一个重要推论是,泛大陆的合并和最终分裂一定是世界地质上具有重大意义的事件。这在北美当然是正确的,在太平洋边缘的科迪勒拉造山带的主要造山和增生与大西洋的开放相对应。自1966年威尔逊发表论文以来,我们已经摆脱了100年来在文献中根深蒂固的固定地槽模型。然而,阿巴拉契亚造山带充满了惊喜,还有许多秘密有待揭示。正如大卫·贝尔德(David Baird)所贴切地表达的那样,奇怪的是,我们似乎发现得越多,地平线仍然在那里,总是邀请我们走近。我们现在面临的问题比威尔逊周期出现之前的前辈更多。在未来的25年、50年或100年里,地平线会引导我们走向何方?到那时,我们离我们现在所处的位置是否会像我们离威尔逊周期之前的世界一样遥远?
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Did the Atlantic close and then reopen?: A commentary
Tuzo Wilson’s 1966 Nature paper entitled “Did the Atlantic close and then re-open?” is truly the major turning point in the history of ideas on the evolution of the Appalachian Orogen. For a hundred years, the Appalachian Orogen was the type geosyncline, and Appalachian evolution was viewed in fixist models of geosynclinal development. Contrasting faunal realms were always enigmatic and never properly explained by notions of land barriers. Equally enigmatic was the symmetry and two-sided nature of the Newfoundland cross-section that refuted the fixist idea that continents grew like trees by the outward addition of asymmetric peripheral rings. The Wilson Cycle of closing a proto-Atlantic Ocean, then re-opening the Atlantic Ocean provided an elegant and simple solution to these enigmas. Wilson realized that island arcs existed on the North American side of the proto-Atlantic, such as the present Notre Dame Subzone in Newfoundland, and that the major faunal boundary lay to the east of these volcanic rocks. He also realized that the early Paleozoic continents may have touched in the middle Ordovician, “...for thereafter the distinction between the Atlantic and Pacific faunal realms ceases to be marked.” One continent encroaching upon another in the middle and late Ordovician explained the former borderland concept of Charles Schuchert and Marshall Kay. Likewise, Kay’s island arcs were most in evidence during the early Ordovician, the time of major proto-Atlantic closing. Wilson also recognized irregularities in ocean closing, which occurs first at promontories, then at re-entrants, with resulting clastic wedges, and an overall change from early Paleozoic marine conditions to middle and late Paleozoic terrestrial conditions. The Taconic allochthons were also part of his ocean closing scenario. The proto-Atlantic was completely closed by the end of the Paleozoic, and major spreading of the Atlantic began in the Cretaceous. Wilson then went on to trace the former course of the proto-Atlantic along the length of the Appalachian–Caledonian chain from Spitsbergen to Florida. This is no small task. It is encouraging to see that the contemporary Newfoundland analysis supported his views, and that even Tuzo had trouble finding a suture along the New England segment of the system. Northwest Africa was accommodated with ease as a Hercynian orogenic belt, in some respects symmetrical to the southern Appalachians. An important corollary of the Wilson Cycle is that the assembly and eventual breakup of Pangaea must have been an event of major significance in world geology. This is certainly true in North America, where major orogenesis and accretion in the Cordilleran Orogen on the Pacific Margin corresponds to Atlantic opening. Since the 1966 Wilson paper, we have emerged from fixist geosynclinal models that were entrenched in the literature for 100 years. Still, the Appalachian Orogen is full of surprises and there are many secrets yet to be revealed. As so aptly expressed by David Baird, how strange it is that the more we seem to find out, the horizon is still there, always inviting us to go closer. We have more problems now than our predecessors, before the advent of the Wilson Cycle. And where will the horizon be teasing us to approach in 25 or 50 or the next 100 years? Will we be then as far away from where we stand now as our present position is from the world of pre-Wilson Cycle practitioners?
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来源期刊
Geoscience Canada
Geoscience Canada 地学-地球科学综合
CiteScore
3.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
9
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Established in 1974, Geoscience Canada is the main technical publication of the Geological Association of Canada (GAC). We are a quarterly journal that emphasizes diversity of material, and also the presentation of informative technical articles that can be understood not only by specialist research workers, but by non-specialists in other branches of the Earth Sciences. We aim to be a journal that you want to read, and which will leave you better informed, rather than more confused.
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