Abstract
Abstract The Early Cambrian palaeogeographical enigma arises when tectonic reconstructions are made using palaeoclimatic v. palaeomagnetic data that result in possibly contradictory tropical, mid-latitude, and south polar locations for major continents. For example, NW Africa and Cadomia may have lain in a tropical zone (0° to ±30° latitude) based on the presence of archaeocyath reefs, minor evaporites, and carbonate platforms at c. 520 Ma ± 5 Ma or, alternatively, NW Africa and Cadomia may have lain in a south polar zone (90° to 60° south latitude) based on palaeomagnetic constraints. Greater Avalonia may have evolved independently from NW Africa if a dropstone constraint implying polar latitudes at c. 530 Ma and a palaeomagnetic constraint implying c. 50° latitude at c. 505 Ma are accommodated. We show here how counterclockwise rotation of Gondwana during the Cambrian about an interior axis may solve the enigma. Gondwanan apparent polar wander becomes consistent with tropical conditions inferred for NW Africa when adjusted to accommodate constraints placing the south pole near Peru for c. 540–520 Ma. Concurrent counterclockwise rotation of Baltica and Gondwana during the Middle Cambrian may have facilitated separation of Greater Avalonia from Baltica across dextral shear zones.
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