Provenance study of Pliocene–Pleistocene sands based on ancient detrital zircons (Alvalade basin, SW Iberian Atlantic Coast)
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Abstract
Pliocene–Pleistocene sand of the Alvalade basinwas taken fromthe sea-cliffs of SWIberia coast for a provenance
study using radiometric dating. The U–Pb ages obtained revealed a wide interval ranging from Cretaceous to
Archean, with predominance of Paleozoic, Neoproterozoic and Cretaceous zircon ages. Cretaceous ages
interpreted to indicate a Sines Massif provenance are dominant in sands close to Cape Sines but are absent in
sand sampled 12 km north. Carboniferous ages younger than ca. 315 Ma suggesting a possible contribution
from the Central-Iberian Zone originally; however, these zircons may be multi-cyclic, having been reworked
from Eocene–Miocene siliciclastic deposits related to transport from central Iberia (Lower Tagus basin drainage
evolution). These signatures provide important constraints on the location and extent of the Pliocene–Pleistocene
topography and drainage system that were probably controlled by: i) Miocene to Pleistocene landscape
rejuvenation driven by Alpine movements along major faults; and ii) residual reliefs related to inherited
Variscan structure. The U–Pb ages obtained also trace the pre-Cenozoic paleotectonic evolution of SWIberia
recorded in their sources: i) the North Gondwana accretion and breakup; ii) the Gondwana and Laurussia
collision; and iii) the Pangea breakup and opening of the Atlantic Ocean.
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Albardeiro et al., 2014. Provenance study of Pliocene–Pleistocene sands based on ancient detrital
zircons (Alvalade Basin, SW Iberian Atlantic coast).Sedimentary Geology 307: 47–58