4.6 Article

Characterizing the Source of the Eastern Galicia Magnetic Anomaly (NW Spain): The Role of Extension in the Origin of Magnetization at the Central Iberian Arc

Journal

TECTONICS
Volume 40, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
DOI: 10.1029/2020TC006120

Keywords

aeromagnetic anomaly; Central Iberian Arc; extensional tectonics; Iberian Massif; Kiaman superchron; magnetic S‐ Type granitoids

Funding

  1. Regional Castilla-Leon Government [SA065P17, BU235P18]
  2. Spanish Ministry of Economy, Industry and Competitiveness [CGL2016-78560-P, CGL2016-77560]
  3. Agencia Estatal de Investigacion [PID2019-108753GB-C21/AECI/10.13039/501100011033]
  4. Salamanca University

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The Eastern Galicia Magnetic Anomaly is extensively studied due to its location on the Lugo-Sanabria gneiss dome and the exposure of its source rocks in the Xistral Tectonic Window. Research on the anomaly's source rocks suggests that magnetization is influenced by late Variscan extensional tectonics, with the entrance of fluids leading to the crystallization of magnetite and hematite. This extension-related magnetization likely affected a large portion of the NW Iberian Massif.
The Eastern Galicia Magnetic Anomaly is the best studied anomaly of the Central Iberian Arc. This is due to its location, on the Lugo-Sanabria gneiss dome, and to the fact that its source rocks crop out in the Xistral Tectonic Window. Multiple studies of this anomaly have been carried out, but still, new results keep on shedding light on its understanding. This paper presents the first results on rock magnetic analyses, natural remanent magnetization, anisotropy of the magnetic susceptibility, X-ray diffraction, and stable isotopes geochemistry carried out on the source rocks of this anomaly. Results suggest that magnetization responds to the increase in oxygen fugacity underwent by rocks affected by late Variscan (330-300 Ma) extensional tectonics. Extensional detachments were the pathways that allowed the entrance of fluids that led to syntectonic crystallization of magnetite and hematite in metasediments and inhomogeneous S-Type granitoids derived from their partial melting. Accordingly, magnetization is not linked to lithologies, but to extensional structures developed in the late Carboniferous/earliest Permian, during the Kiaman reverse superchron. Systematic reverse magnetic remanence exhibited by hematite-bearing samples confirms the age of the magnetization and adds complexity to the interpretation of the anomaly. Understanding the EGMA contributes to the interpretation of other anomalies existing in the CIA, also located on thermal domes. The observed extension-related magnetization probably affected most of the NW Iberian Massif, thus hindering the study of previous tectonics by paleomagnetic techniques. This work aims to provide new hints to interpret magnetic anomalies located in extensional tectonic contexts worldwide.

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