Abstract

AbstractThe Lower Palaeozoic sequences, unconformably overlying the Timanides of Timan, Pechora, Pai-Khoi, Vaigach, Novaya Zemlya and the Polar, Northern, Middle and Southern Urals are described and interpreted with regard to their stratigraphy, sedimentation, structure and biogeography. These mainly shallow marine sedimentary successions, with associated igneous rocks (largely alkaline), are Ordovician in age, reaching back into the Late Cambrian in some areas, particularly in the east, along the front of the Urals. They were deposited during rifting of Baltica’s northeastern margin and subsequent development of a passive continental margin. The underlying, mainly Neoproterozoic basement of turbidites in the west and calc-alkaline volcanites and ophiolites further east are briefly referred to, with particular emphasis on the age of the youngest rocks. Based on these data, a Timanian orogenic belt can be traced along the northeastern and eastern margin of the East European Craton. The timing of orogeny can be constrained to the Vendian, perhaps extending into the Early Cambrian.

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