Abstract

SUMMARY This study revisits the palaeomagnetism of the Sines massif (∼76 Ma) in the southwestern Iberian Margin (Portugal). The palaeomagnetic analysis was complemented by a comprehensive study of the magnetic mineralogy by means of rock magnetic measurements and petrographicobservations.Theoveralldispersionofpalaeomagneticdirections(declinationranging between ∼N0 ◦ and ∼N50 ◦ ) and their migration observed during stepwise demagnetizations have revealed the superposition of remanence components. We interpret this complex palaeomagnetic behaviour as related to the regional hydrothermalism associated with the last stages of Late Cretaceous magmatic activity. This environment favoured mineralogical alteration and a partial chemical remagnetization, giving in most samples a composite magnetization, which has been erroneously interpreted as the primary one in a previous study, then leading to a questionable model for Cretaceous Iberia rotation. Nonetheless, for some samples a single component has been isolated. Interesting rock magnetic properties and microscopic observations point to a well-preserved magnetic mineralogy for these samples, with magnetite clearly of primary origin. The associated ChRM mean direction (D/I =3.9 ◦ /46.5 ◦ , α95 =1.7 ◦ ,N =31 samples) then represents the true primary magnetization of the Sines massif. This new palaeomagnetic direction and the corresponding palaeomagnetic pole (long = 332.0 ◦ ,l at =− 79.5 ◦ , A95 = 1.7 ◦ ) agrees with those from the other palaeomagnetic works for the same period and region (e.g. the Sintra and Monchique massifs), yielding a lack of significant rotation of Iberia relative to stable Europe since the uppermost Late Cretaceous (Campanian–Maastrichtian).

Highlights

  • The opening of Biscay Bay and consequent counter-clockwise rotation of Iberia with respect to Eurasia is a long-standing geodynamic problem (Argand 1924; Du Toit 1937; Carey 1958; Bullard et al 1965)

  • This study revisits the palaeomagnetism of the Sines massif

  • The palaeomagnetic analysis was complemented by a comprehensive study of the magnetic mineralogy

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