Abstract

AbstractGondwana was an enormous supertarrane. At its peak, it represented a landmass of about 100 × 106 km2 in size, corresponding to approximately 64% of all land areas today. Gondwana assembled in the Middle Cambrian, merged with Laurussia to form Pangea in the Carboniferous, and finally disintegrated with the separation of East and West Gondwana at about 170 Ma, and the separation of Africa and South America around 130 Ma. Here we have updated plate reconstructions from Gondwana history, with a special emphasis on the interactions between the continental crust of Gondwana and the mantle plumes resulting in Large Igneous Provinces (LIPs) at its surface. Moreover, we present an overview of the subvolcanic parts of the Gondwana LIPs (Kalkarindji, Central Atlantic Magmatic Province, Karoo and the Paraná–Etendeka) aimed at summarizing our current understanding of timings, scale and impact of these provinces. The Central Atlantic Magmatic Province (CAMP) reveals a conservative volume estimate of 700 000 km3 of subvolcanic intrusions, emplaced in the Brazilian sedimentary basins (58–66% of the total CAMP sill volume). The detailed evolution and melt-flux estimates for the CAMP and Gondwana-related LIPs are, however, poorly constrained, as they are not yet sufficiently explored with high-precision U–Pb geochronology.

Highlights

  • Long Gondwana history, and a useful summary of our current understanding

  • We put a special emphasis on the emplacement environments of the subvolcanic parts of the Large Igneous Provinces (LIPs), in particular of the Central Atlantic Magmatic Province (CAMP) and the affected sedimentary basins, as this theme is poorly known outside the Brazilian geological community

  • We argue that the mean thickness is the most reasonable value to be used for estimating sill volumes in sedimentary basins, but minimum and maximum volumes are reported in order to show the total range of plausible values

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Summary

Objectives

The aim of this paper is to present plate reconstructions of the evolution of Gondwana, and to assess the timing and consequences of LIP formation

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