(Redirected from Paleo-Tethys)

Map of Paleo-Tethys Ocean.
The 'Paleo-Tethys Ocean' was an ancient
Paleozoic ocean. It was located between the
paleocontinent Gondwana and the so called
Hunic terranes. These are divided into the ''European Hunic'' (today the
crust under parts of
Central Europe (called "Armorica") and
Iberia) and ''Asiatic Hunic'' (today the crust of
China and parts of eastern
Central Asia). A large
transform fault is supposed to have separated the two terranes.

Image of Paleo-Tethys Ocean, before the Cimmerian Plate moves north, which made the ocean closed, the Paleo-Tethys Ocean closed off about 180 mya. ~290 mya (Early
Permian)

The Cimmerian plate starts to move northward, closing the Paleo-Tethys Ocean, while the Tethys Ocean begins to open from the south. ~249 mya (
Permian-
Triassic boundary)
The Paleo-Tethys Ocean began to form when the two small terranes
rifted away from
Gondwana in the late
Ordovician, to begin moving toward
Euramerica in the north, in the process the
Rheic Ocean between Old Red Sandstone Continent and the Hunic terranes was to disappear. In the Devonian, the eastern part of Paleo-Tethys opened up, when the
North and
South China microcontinents, moved northward. This caused
Proto-Tethys Ocean, a precursor of Paleo-Tethys, to shrink, until the Late
Carboniferous, when North China collided with Siberia. In the late
Devonian however, a
subduction zone developed south of the Hunic terranes, where Paleo-Tethys
oceanic crust was subducted. Gondwana started moving north, in the process the western part of the Paleo-Tethys would close.
In the
Carboniferous continental collision took place between the Old Red Sandstone Continent and the European Hunic terrane, in
North America this is called the
Alleghenian orogeny, in
Europe the
Variscan orogeny. The Rheic Ocean had completely disappeared, and the western Paleo-Tethys was closing.
By the Late
Permian, the small elongated
Cimmerian plate (today's crust of
Turkey,
Iran,
Tibet and parts of
South-East Asia) broke away from
Gondwana (now part of
Pangaea). South of the Cimmerian continent a new ocean, the
Tethys Ocean, was created. By the Late
Triassic, all that was left of the Paleo-Tethys Ocean was a narrow seaway. In the Early
Jurassic epoch, as part of the
Alpine Orogeny, the oceanic crust of the Paleo-Tethys subducted under the
Cimmerian plate, closing the ocean from west to east. A last remnant of Paleo-Tethys Ocean might be oceanic crust under the
Black Sea.
Today, the
Paleo-Tethys Ocean sat where the
Indian Ocean and
Southern Asia are now located.
See also
★
Tethys Ocean
★
Proto-Tethys Ocean
Reference
★ Stampfli, G.M.; Raumer, J.F. von; & Borel, G.D.; Feb 2002 ''Paleozoic evolution of pre-Variscan terranes: from Gondwana to the Variscan collision'' in Geological Society of America special paper 364, p 263
External links
★
Late Carboniferous Map - at ''PaleoMap Project''; a good picture of Paleo-Tethys Ocean before the
Cimmerian Plate moves northward.
★
Paleo-Tethys and Proto-Tethys - at
global history