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Geological Society, London, Special Publications; 1984; v. 14; p. 63-70;
DOI: 10.1144/GSL.SP.1984.014.01.06
© 1984 Geological Society of London

Mainland Europe

Palaeozoic evolution of the Plateau d’Aigurande (NW Massif Central, France)

Jean-Michel Quenardel & Patrick Rolin

Laboratoire de Géologie Structurale, Université Paris-Sud, bât. 504, F-91405 Orsay Cédex, France

The Plateau d’Aigurande represents the north-westernmost part of the French Massif Central. It is overlain by the sediments of the Paris Basin to the north and bounded by the La Marche shear zone to the south. Detailed mapping, mainly from the Creuse Valley region, indicates thrust and nappe tectonics.

Beginning at the base of the sequence one can recognize: (1) the Fougères unit (schists of low to medium grade) intruded by syntectonic leucogranites; (2) the Eguzon unit (medium- to high-grade schists which are partly diaphtoretic in the lower part of the unit); (3) the Gargilesse unit (high-grade schists); and (4) the Migmatitic unit.

The metasediments of the Fougères, Eguzon and Gargilesse units were originally coarse grained clastics. They are interbanded with magmatic units (orthogneisses and amphibolites). The migmatites are derived from greywacke-type rocks intruded by magmatic rocks (orthogneisses and amphibolites).

Following a high-pressure (Silurian?) tectonometamorphic event, the piling up of tectonostratigraphic units occurred during two periods of deformation. The main one, probably of late Caledonian (Acadian?) age, was synchronous with or slightly after the climax of metamorphism. The second, of Westphalian age, was accompanied by the emplacement of leucogranitic magma and by retrograde metamorphism. The shear-sense appears to have been from SW to NE during the Acadian phase and from NW to SE during the Westphalian. Structural and lithological studies suggest that the three lowermost units may have been derived from the same palaeogeographic domain while the migmatites have a distinctly different history.