dc.contributor.author Gabriele Paoli
dc.contributor.author Sergio Rocchi
dc.contributor.author Anna K. Ksienzyk
dc.contributor.author Hallgeir Sirevaag
dc.contributor.author H. Jørgensen
dc.contributor.author Joachim Jacobs
dc.contributor.author Joachim Jacobs
dc.contributor.author Jan Košler
dc.date.accessioned 2025-06-20T09:55:30Z
dc.date.available 2025-06-20T09:55:30Z
dc.date.issued 2016-10-01
dc.description.abstract Abstract Elba Island, located midway between Corsica and mainland Italy, is a small but important fragment of the Adria Plate. It has a rich sedimentary record preserved in a stack of tectonic nappes of both continental margin and oceanic origin. Especially the detrital zircons in early Paleozoic to early Mesozoic metasedimentary rocks provide an archive of many important geological events in the island's history. Elba Island and Adria originated along the northern margin of Gondwana, but drifted north in Silurian times to become part of Europe. A large new dataset of LA-ICP-MS and SIMS U–Pb zircon ages allows us to trace this history. Three main stratigraphic units have been investigated. The oldest Porto Azzurro Unit was deposited in the early Cambrian and has zircon age distributions indicating a typical northern African provenance, most likely sourced from the Saharan Metacraton. The Ortano Unit has a simple, mostly unimodal Ordovician age distribution that is entirely dominated by metavolcanic rocks and their erosional products; a sample of the metavolcanic Ortano Porphyroids provided a SIMS U–Pb zircon age of 460 ± 3 Ma. This phase of intense volcanism is related to the subduction of the Rheic Ocean beneath Gondwana, terminating with initial rifting and subsequent opening of the Paleotethys. This also marks the onset of the separation of a range of European terranes, including Adria and future Elba Island, from Gondwana. The Permo-Triassic Monticiano–Roccastrada Unit is the first to show a European provenance with the appearance of large amounts of Variscan and late to post-Variscan detritus. The presence of Variscan detrital zircons in the Permo-Triassic sediments is unexpected, since a Variscan age signature is so far not well recorded in the Adria Plate. This dataset is the most comprehensive detrital zircon dataset so far available for the Adria Plate and documents Adria's close affinity to Africa in the Lower Paleozoic, as well as its initial rifting within an active continental margin setting during the Ordovician and its final separation and independent evolution since late Palaeozoic times.
dc.description.epage 288
dc.description.spage 273
dc.description.volume 38
dc.identifier.doi 10.1016/j.gr.2015.12.006
dc.identifier.handle 11568/797506
dc.identifier.handle 2158/1086449
dc.identifier.issn 1342-937X
dc.identifier.openaire doi_dedup___:fe33501717820e6d9204b16943fe79b4
dc.identifier.uri https://trapdev.rcub.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/1354228
dc.openaire.affiliation University of Pisa
dc.openaire.collaboration 1
dc.publisher Elsevier BV
dc.rights RESTRICTED
dc.rights.license Elsevier TDM
dc.source Gondwana Research
dc.subject U–Pb detrital zircon age, Tuscan Paleozoic basement, Provenance analysis, Porto Azzurro Unitl, Ortano Unit, Monticiano–Roccastrada Unit
dc.subject Monticiano–Roccastrada Unit; Ortano Unit; Porto Azzurro Unit; Provenance analysis; Tuscan Paleozoic basement; U–Pb detrital zircon age; Geology
dc.subject.fos 01 natural sciences
dc.subject.fos 0105 earth and related environmental sciences
dc.subject.sdg 14. Life underwater
dc.title From Gondwana to Europe: The journey of Elba Island (Italy) as recorded by U–Pb detrital zircon ages of Paleozoic metasedimentary rocks
dc.type publication

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