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The Central Atlantic Magmatic Province

Insights From Fragments of Pangea

Hames, W. E. / McHone, J. G. / Renne, P. R. / Ruppel, Carolyn (Herausgeber)

Geophysical Monograph Series (Band Nr. 136)

Cover

1. Auflage Januar 2003
276 Seiten, Hardcover
Wiley & Sons Ltd

ISBN: 978-0-87590-995-0
John Wiley & Sons

Published by the American Geophysical Union as part of the Geophysical Monograph Series, Volume 136.

A singular event in Earth's history occurred roughly 200 million years ago, as rifting of the largest and most recent supercontinent was joined by basaltic volcanism that formed the most extensive large igneous province (LIP) known. A profound and widespread mass extinction of terrestrial and marine genera occurred at about the same time, suggesting a causal link between the biological transitions of the Triassic-Jurassic boundary and massive volcanism. A series of stratigraphic, geochronologic, petrologic, tectonic, and geophysical studies have led to the identification of the dispersed remnants of this Central Atlantic Magmatic Province (CAMP) on the rifted margins of four continents. Current discoveries are generally interpreted to indicate that CAMP magmatism occurred in a relative and absolute interval of geologic time that was brief, and point to mechanisms of origin and global environmental effects. Because many of these discoveries have occurred within the past several years, in this monograph we summarize new observations and provide an up-to-date review of the province.

Preface

Willis E. Hames, J. Gregory McHone, Paul R. Renne, and Carolyn
Ruppel vii

Introduction

W. Hames, J. G. McHone, P. Renne, and C. Ruppel 1

Cyclo-, Magneto-, and Bio-Stratigraphic Constraints on the
Duration of the CAMP Event and its

Relationship to the Triassic-Jurassic Boundary

Paul E. Olsen, Dennis V. Kent, Mohammed Et-Touhami, and John
Puffer 7

Relative Timing of CAMP, Rifting, Continental Breakup, and Basin
Inversion: Tectonic Significance

Roy W. Schlische, Martha Oliver With jack, and Paul E. Olsen
33

Age Estimates of the Seaward-Dipping Volcanic Wedge, Earliest
Oceanic Crust, and Earliest

Drift-Stage Sediments Along the North American Atlantic Continental
Margin

Richard N. Benson 61

Critical Evaluation of 40Ar/39Ar Ages for the Central Atlantic
Magmatic Province: Timing,

Duration and Possible Migration of Magmatic Centers

Ajoy K. Baksi 77

The Central Atlantic Magmatic Province (CAMP) in Brazil:
Petrology, Geochemistry, 40Ar/39Ar Ages,

Paleomagnetism, and Geodynamic Implications

Angelo De Min, Enzo M. Piccirillo, Andrea Marzoli, Giuliano
Bellieni, Paul R. Renne, Marcia Ernesto, and Leila S.
Marques 91

Paleomagnetic and Geochemical Constraints on the Timing and
Duration of the

CAMP Activity in Northeastern Brazil

M. Ernesto, G. Bellieni, E. M. Piccirillo, I. S. Marques, A. De
Min, I. G Pacca, G. Martins, and, W. P. Macedo 129

A Reactivated Back-arc Source for CAMP Magma

John H. Puffer 151

Temporal Chemical Variations Within Lowermost Jurassic
Tholeiitic Magmas

of the Central Atlantic Magmatic Province

Vincent J. M. Salters, P. C. Ragland, W. E. Hames, K. Milla, and
C. Ruppel 163

The Late Triassic-Early Jurassic Volcanism of Morocco and
Portugal in the Framework

of the Central Atlantic Magmatic Province: An Overview

Nasrrddine Youbi, Lfnia Tavares Martins, Jose Manuel Munha,
Hassan Ibouh, Jose Madeira,

El Houssaine Ait Chayeb, and Abdelmajid El Boukhari 179

The Northernmost CAMP: 40Ar/39Ar Age, Petrology and Sr-Nd-Pb
Isotope Geochemistry

of the Kerforne Dike, Brittany, France

Fred Jourdan, Andrea Marzoli, Herve Bertrand, Michael Cosca, and
Denis Fontignie 209

Magma Flow Pattern in the North Mountain Basalts of the 200 Ma
CAMP Event:

Evidence From the Magnetic Fabric

Richard E. Ernst, Jelle Zeilinga de Boer, Peter Ludwig, and
Taras Gapotchenko 227

Volatile Emissions From Central Atlantic Magmatic Province
Basalts: Mass Assumptions

and Environmental Consequences

J. Gregory McHone 241

Volcanism of the Central Atlantic Magmatic Province as a
Potential Driving Force

in the End-Triassic Mass Extinction

Jozsef Palfy 255
W. E. Hames and J. G. McHone are the authors of The Central Atlantic Magmatic Province: Insights From Fragments of Pangea, published by Wiley.

C. Ruppel, USGS