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Journal of the Geological Society; 1986; v. 143; issue.1; p. 177-184;
DOI: 10.1144/gsjgs.143.1.0177
© 1986 Geological Society of London

Article

Conodont palaeobiogeography and thermal maturation in the Caledonides

R. J. ALDRIDGE

Department of Geology, The University, Nottingham NG7 2RD, UK

Conodont elements are important in biostratigraphy, in palaeoenvironmental and palaeobiogeographical analyses, and in assessing the thermal history of Lower Palaeozoic strata throughout the Caledonian belt. The differentiation of Ordovician conodont faunas into the North Atlantic and North American Midcontinent provinces is not closely comparable with the provincial patterns shown by other faunal groups and does not relate clearly to criteria for recognizing continental separation across the Iapetus Ocean. Some species associations adapted to cool, normal marine waters were able to cross the ocean at the time of its presumed maximum extent.

The colours of conodont elements reflect the thermal history of strata and can be used in studies of low-grade metamorphism. In S. Wales, for example, metamorphic temperatures indicated by conodont colour are too high to he accounted for by simple burial beneath the known stratigraphical overburden under normal heat flow conditions. Elsewhere, conodont colour trends also serve to constrain and test models of metamorphism that involve sedimentary burial in subsiding basins, tectonic burial under nappes, or the thermal effects of intrusions.




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References
Geological Society, London, Memoirs, 2002; 24: 119 - 125.
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J. A. Rasmussen, J. A. RASMUSSEN, and M. P. SMITH
Conodont geothermometry and tectonic overburden in the northernmost East Greenland Caledonides
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M. T. Dean
Conodont colour maturation indices for the Carboniferous of west-central Scotland
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M. Teichmuller
Recent advances in coalification studies and their application to geology
Geological Society, London, Special Publications, 1987; 32: 127 - 169.
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