Buch, Englisch, Band 4, 370 Seiten, HC runder Rücken kaschiert, Format (B × H): 160 mm x 241 mm, Gewicht: 817 g
Buch, Englisch, Band 4, 370 Seiten, HC runder Rücken kaschiert, Format (B × H): 160 mm x 241 mm, Gewicht: 817 g
Reihe: Petrology and Structural Geology
ISBN: 978-0-7923-0255-1
Verlag: Springer Netherlands
1.1. HISTORICAL DEVELOPMENT OF THE OPHIOLITE CONCEPT. Ophiolite, Greek for 'the snake stone', appears to have received its first written definition by Brongniart (1813) as a serpentine matrix containing various minerals. Later in 1821 and 1827, Brongniart determined that volcanic and gabbroic rocks were also present, associated with cherts, and he ascribed an igneous origin to the ophiolite. Amstutz (1980) gives an excellent exegesis of these early contributions and traces the further use of the term and concept of ophiolite. This concept had been forged in the western Alps and Apennines where, thanks to talented Italian geologists, in particular A. Sismonda, B. Gastaldi, V. Novarese and S. Franchi, the study on metamorphic ophiolites (the 'pietre verdi') has rapidly progressed. At the tum of the century the association of radiolarite, diabase, gabbro (euphotide), and serpentinite-peridotite was clearly identified, even through their metamorphic transformations. In 1902, Franchi developed the hypothesis introduced earlier by Lotti (1886), of a submarine outflow to explain the 'pietre verdi' association, on the basis of the attribution of the variolites and metamorphic prasinites to an hypabyssal volcanism, also responsible for the formation of radiolarites. Thus, before the popular work of Steinmann in 1927, the various components constituting an ophiolite had been identified and its hypabyssal origin proposed. As recalled by Amstutz (1980), the so-called 'Steinmann trinity', which consists of the association of radiolarites, diabases and serpentinites, was more completely and better defined in these earlier works.
Zielgruppe
Research
Autoren/Hrsg.
Fachgebiete
- Geowissenschaften Geologie Paläontologie, Taphonomie
- Geowissenschaften Geologie Marine Geologie, Ozeanographie (Meereskunde)
- Geowissenschaften Geologie Geodäsie, Kartographie, Fernerkundung
- Geowissenschaften Geologie Paläoökologie
- Geowissenschaften Geologie Paläozoologie
- Geowissenschaften Geologie Geophysik
- Geowissenschaften Geologie Petrologie, Mineralogie
- Naturwissenschaften Physik Angewandte Physik Geophysik
- Geowissenschaften Geologie Paläobotanik
- Geowissenschaften Geographie | Raumplanung Geodäsie, Kartographie, GIS, Fernerkundung
Weitere Infos & Material
I - Introduction and Analytical Methods.- 1. Introduction.- 2. Analytical methods in ophiolites.- II - Typical Ophiolite Complexes.- 3. Oman ophiolite: the harzburgite ophiolite type.- 4. Xigaze and Trinity ophiolites-Plagioclase lherzolite massifs: the lherzolite ophiolite type.- 5. Bogota Peninsula and N.E. districts of New Caledonia — Wadi Tayin in Oman — Coastal Complex of Newfoundland: possible origin in transform faults.- 6. Canyon Mountain ophiolite: possible origin in an island arc.- III - Activity of Oceanic Spreading Centers and the Origin of Ophiolites.- 7. Melt generation and extraction in mantle diapers.- 8. The various ophiolites and their oceanic environments of origin.- 9. Mantle flow, tithospheric accretion and segmentation of oceanic ridges.- 10. Magmatic processes in the uppermost mantle at oceanic spreading centers.- 11 - Generation of oceanic crust.- IV - Emplacement of Ophiolites Trough Space and Time.- 12 - Ophiolites emplacement.- 13 - Ophiolite belts through time.