ABSTRACT The timing and mechanism of the crustal extension that caused blocks of continental crust to rift and drift northwards from the northern Gondwana margin during the Early Palaeozoic are currently debated. Here, we present new field, geochemical and U-Pb zircon data from peri-Gondwanan Central Sakarya terrane in NW Turkey to shed light on the timing and petrogenesis of extensional magmatism and subsequent passive margin development of the northern Gondwana margin. Our 1/25.000 scale mapping of a selected area (250 km2) has revealed a south-vergent thrust stack comprising three slices. The Middle Slice of the thrust stack consists of a gneiss-amphibolite complex that has a basement-cover type stratigraphy (before regional metamorphism). The basement unit consists of meta-granitoids, intruded by meta-syenite and banded amphibolites, with geochemical characteristics reflecting I&S-type, A-type and within plate alkaline/transitional-type magmatism, respectively. The cover meta-clastic sediments have amphibolite lenses with MORB and back-arc basin-type geochemistry. Meta-granitoid bodies yielded zircon U-Pb ages of 507 ± 16 Ma, 503 ± 12 Ma, and 488 ± 2.6 Ma (Late Cambrian-Early Ordovician), whereas the meta-syenites gave ages of 473.9 ± 5.7 Ma and 471.4 ± 2.5 Ma (late Early Ordovician); also, age of the banded amphibolite was dated as 473.3 ± 4 Ma. The youngest detrital zircon population in the pebbly quartzite sample within cover meta-sediments (458 ± 3 Ma) constrains the maximum depositional age to around early Late Ordovician. The late Early Ordovician bimodal magmatism, a key focus of our study, is interpreted to have formed in response to the Rheic Ocean rifting along the northern margin of Gondwana. The Late Cambrian granitic magmatism, a precursor to bimodal magmatism, can be explained by lithospheric thinning and upwelling of the asthenosphere to form anatectic silicic melts. The unconformity between the basement and cover units may represent the initiation of a new phase of extension at the N Gondwana margin that culminated in the northward drifting of the Central Sakarya and the opening of Palaeotethys, associated with back-arc basic magmatism in Late Ordovician-Silurian.