The Iberian Peninsula was joined to
Armorica (Northern France) before the Late Mesozoic. In the early Cretaceous, the
Bay of Biscay started opening around 126 Ma and completed by 85 Ma. This created the Biscay Abyssal Plain, and parted the peninsula from the
Trevelyan Escarpment. During this time Iberia rotated anticlockwise relative to Eurasia. This caused the subduction of the Ligurian Basin onto the eastern side. This formed the Betic nappe stack. After 85 Ma the Atlantic Ocean opening started between Ireland and
Greenland. This left the Bay of Biscay as a failed rift. The new Atlantic spreading caused Eurasia to rotate clockwise back towards Iberia causing underthrusting and subduction on the east side of the northern edge of Iberia, forming the
Pyrenees. In Late
Triassic and Early
Jurassic there were two stages of rifting involving extension and subsistence on the western margin of Iberia. It also extended the western margin. The Iberian Abyssal Plain, off the west coast of Portugal and Spain, formed 126 Ma. This separated
Newfoundland's
Grand Banks, with Galica Bank and Flemish Cap being split at 118 Ma. By Early
Cretaceous, 110 Ma rifting occurs on west and north west edges. In the Mesozoic, Late Jurassic Africa started moving east, and the Alpine Tethys opened. Subsistence related to this caused deep deposits of sediments on the east and some sediment remnants in
pop downs in central parts of Spain. Two stages of rifting occurred in the east, one from Later
Permian to Triassic, and the second from Late Jurassic to early Cretaceous. On the south side deposits of carbonates and clastic sediments formed a shelf in shallow water during late Triassic and
Liassic times. This was rifted in
Toarcian times (Early Jurassic 190 Ma). Active rifting was complete by 160 Ma. After this
thermal subsidence occurred till the end of Cretaceous. During this time rifting separated North America from Africa forming a transform zone. Firstly from Late Permian to Late Triassic the Aragonese Branch sediments were deposited. These started with early layers of quartz rich sandstone derived from sedimentary and metasedimentary rocks. This first layer was 0.1 km thick. Later the deposits were derived from plutonic rocks and were feldspar rich and cemented by clay. These early deposits were alluvial and lacustrine. Finally the basin was below sea level and shallow marine carbonates were deposited followed by coastal evaporites. The thickness of these were determined by tectonic depression of the basin floor, and varies from 1 to 6 km. The names of the formations are Saxonian (Araviana Unit from the Permian), Buntsandstein (Tierga Unit, Calcena Unit, Trasobares Unit), Muschelkalk (shallow coastal marine calcareous conditions) and Keuper (evaporites). The Saxonian facies consists of sandstone over quartz conglomerate, and
paleosoils. The sandstone almost entirely consists of rounded quartz grains. Rock fragments in this are shales and cherts. The grains are very compacted and cemented by quartz. The Buntsandstein contains sandstone with large crystals from plutonic rocks as well as shale and chert fragments. They are cemented by quartz, feldspar and some carbonate matrix. The presence of Potassium felspar indicates arid conditions were prevalent at the time. During the Olenekian the average temperature was in the low 30s, and the rainfall was less than 180 mm per year. Secondly the Cameros Basin was formed and filled from Late Jurassic,
Tithonian to
Berriasian and
Valanginian to early
Albian. These are in cycles with alluvial fragments at the bottom and lake limestones and marl towards the top of each cycle. The source of the clastics was the Iberian Massif to the south west of the basin. Formations from this basin include Tera, Oncala, Urbion, Enciso, Olivan and Escucha. The sandstone in the Tithonian is mostly rounded quartz grains, but also 14% of carbonate rock fragments. Next the Berrieasian time deposits are sandstone with mostly quartz, but some albite. The quartz has 35% of polycrystalline grains. It is cemented by clay minerals. This was mainly derived from low grade metamorphic rocks of the Variscan basement. The sandstone from Valanginian is formed from windblown quartz grains. The source of the material was probably Jurassic sedimentary rocks (carbonates and shales). From Hauterivian to Albion ages the sandstones are more mixed with more feldspar. Kaolinite is frequently found filling the space between grains. The Mesozoic basins were folded and thrust, to form the Iberian Ranges. 30 km of shortening occurred. The ranges trend north west – south east. In the northwest the ranges are buried under the Douro Basin. Sierra de Altomira is a north–south-oriented range separated from the Iberian Ranges by
Tagus Basin. This was formed from a thrust sheet that split through evaporite beds from the Triassic.
Atlantic opening The Atlantic continental margin off Portugal and Spain is unique. In the zone between continental crust and oceanic crust there is a 100 km wide zone of
exhumed continental mantle. During the rift splitting Newfoundland from Iberia there was very little vulcanism and the rift was starved of magma. This resulted in faults uplifting mantle from under the continent to the sea floor. Hyperextended rifting is the name for this phenomenon. The mantle rock is
peridotite. The peridotite had been formed from a melt, that was depleted in crustal materials, but then was re-enriched in
plagioclase felspar. The mantle exhumation occurred in two phases. First from
Valanginian to
Hauterivian (142–130 Ma) expansion happened at around 7 mm per year. Secondly from Hauterivian to
Albian (130–113 Ma) the mantle was exhumed at around 13 mm per year. After this, the asthenosphere penetrated to the surface, a mid-oceanic ridge formed and normal oceanic crust was formed. The shallower 2–3 km of peridotite has been converted to green serpentine by alteration by seawater at depth. The very surface skin (40 m thick) of the serpentine was then altered to yellow serpentine by low temperature seawater treatment.
Gorringe Bank The
Gorringe Bank is part of the ridge along the
Azores-Gibraltar fault zone. It is about 60 km wide and 180 km long in the northeast direction. Two high
seamounts exist: the Gettysburg Seamount has a depth of 25 m, and the Ormonde Seamount is 65 m below the surface. The plate boundaries here are converging at 4 mm/y, as well as sliding past each other.
Upper mantle and oceanic crust are exposed along this bank. Ferrogabbro dated at 77 Ma has been intruded. Also at 66 Ma the
Canary hotspot mantle plume passed by and caused alkaline magma to intrude. Where there is crust, it is very thin, so that the
Moho comes up to the sea floor. Sediment overlies the mantle, so this could be considered as crust. Since the
Miocene there has been shortening of the ocean crust absorbed by folding, and thrusting.
Tagus Abyssal Plain North of the Gorringe Bank is the
Tagus Abyssal Plain. To the east is the continental shelf of Portugal, and to the west is the
Madeira-Tore Rise. On the south an
olistostrome, the remains of a landslip from the Gorringe Bank, resulting in chaotic sediments. In most of the Tagus Plain the crust is 8 km thick, however in the north it is only 2 km thick. Northwest is the
Estremadura Spur.
Horseshoe Abyssal Plain South of the Gorringe Bank is the
Horseshoe Abyssal Plain. This plain extends south to the Ampere and Coral Patch Seamounts, the Madeira-Tore Rise in the west and the continental slope in the east. The crust below this plain is 15 km thick. Crustal shortening has been accommodated in the plain by reverse faults every few kilometers.
Gulf of Cadiz Where the Guadalquivir basin extends to the west off the shore, it forms the
Gulf of Cadiz. In the mid Miocene there was mountain building, then from Miocene to Pliocene there was stretching, and finally in Pleistocene the sea floor was compressed again. The gulf has
mud volcanoes on the sea floor: Darwin Mud Volcano, Mercator mud volcano and Challenger Mud Volcano.
Lusitanian Basin The
Lusitanian Basin stretches along the mid Portuguese coast with part on land and part off shore. In Sinemurian–Callovian thick layers of carbonates were deposited . Off the northern coast of Portugal is the
Porto Basin, also elongated in the north–south direction. Further offshore from this, and also off shore from the west coast of Spain is the
Galicia Interior Basin. These basins were formed by rifting in the Late Triassic (). Further out to sea off the west coast of Spain is the
Galicia Bank, which consists of continental crust, and was formerly attached to the
Flemish Cap. The Galicia Bank has limestone and
marl deposited in shallow water from the
Tithonian age. This is capped by dolomite from the
Berriasian age (). From Tithonian–Berriasian () the rift had shallow platforms with carbonates deposited, and sand in the depths. From Valanginian–Hauterivian () carbonate cemented sediments were formed. From
Valanginian–
Hauterivian () oxygen was poor, and there were six periods with no oxygen (
anoxic events). From Turonian–Paleocene () oxygen was again available and sediments were reddish or multicoloured. Some areas had strong currents. In the Paleocene () dark black shales mark the lack of oxygen in stagnant water. From
Thanetian to Oligocene () and through to the present day, calcareous and siliceous sediments are laid down. A strong deep water circulation started about and continues till now. The oceanic anoxic events have been called Bonarelli event (OAE2 at ) (caused by volcanic eruptions in the Caribbean), the
Mid-Cenomanian Event at and OAE 1b, OAE 1c, and OAE 1d in the Albian (around ). The carbon in the black shales appears to come from land as well as the oceans, and nitrogen fixation was also high during these periods. The Lusitanian Basin is very rich in fossils, mostly marine invertebrates and vertebrates, including dinosaur bones and tracks.
Movement From 170 to 120 Ma more than 200 km of left lateral slip occurred between Europe and Iberia as it was rifted from the Grand Banks. From 120 to 83 Ma 115 km of convergence in Sardinia and Corsica region. At 83 Ma convergence with Europe happened till 67.7 Ma when it stopped moving with respect to Europe. In the Eocene 55–46 Ma there was right lateral slip. Then convergence again till the Eocene till early Oligocene.
Spanish Central System The Spanish Central System is a mountain range separating the
Tagus and
Douro basins.
Sierra de Gredos and
Sierra de Guadarrama comprise the named ranges. The land was compressed and elevated as a result of the Alpine Orogeny. ==Pyrenees==