The structures in the SW part of the Cantabrian Mountains have much in common with those of the Foothills Belt of the Rocky Mountains, the Alps and the Central European Hercynian orogene, and their origin can be explained in the same way as that of the structures in these orogenes. The greywacke sedimentation and the folding both migrated from the internal to the external part of the original basin during the Upper Carboniferous. The folds and thrust faults run parallel to the axis of the original basin. The basement has been broken into large blocks in the shape of parallelograms, along the boundary faults of which local deviations of the regional directions occurred
Distinct general lithological features, separated by unconformities, serve to distinguish three grou...
The amalgamation of Pangea during the Carboniferous produced a winding mountain belt: the Variscan o...
The structure of the western termination of the Alpine Pyrenean-Cantabrian Orogen (NW Iberian Penins...
Precambrian clastic rocks, deposited under unstable conditions, were folded before in a relatively s...
23 pagesInternational audienceThe Pyrenean-Cantabrian Orogen arose through the collision of the Iber...
The present map is the continuation of the map published by De Sitter in 1962. The folded Precambria...
After a late-Precambrian folding, clastic deposits, partly continental, spread out over the region d...
The Pyrenean-Cantabrian Orogen arose through the collision of the Iberian and Eurasian plates, mostl...
The present-day topography in Iberia is related to geodynamic processes dealing with lithospheric-sc...
This compilation of stratigraphic and structural data accompanying the (re)issue of the 1:50000 shee...
A synthesis of the development of the Variscan orogene, of which the present Cantabrian Mountains fo...
The Nansa-Deva map sheet of the Geological Map of the Southern Cantabrian Mountains is published. Th...
The Carboniferous Pisuerga basin developed north of the León line and as such is the most eastern on...
After a late-Precambrian folding, clastic deposits, partly continental, spread out over the region d...
The amalgamation of Pangea during the Carboniferous produced a winding mountain belt: the Variscan o...
Distinct general lithological features, separated by unconformities, serve to distinguish three grou...
The amalgamation of Pangea during the Carboniferous produced a winding mountain belt: the Variscan o...
The structure of the western termination of the Alpine Pyrenean-Cantabrian Orogen (NW Iberian Penins...
Precambrian clastic rocks, deposited under unstable conditions, were folded before in a relatively s...
23 pagesInternational audienceThe Pyrenean-Cantabrian Orogen arose through the collision of the Iber...
The present map is the continuation of the map published by De Sitter in 1962. The folded Precambria...
After a late-Precambrian folding, clastic deposits, partly continental, spread out over the region d...
The Pyrenean-Cantabrian Orogen arose through the collision of the Iberian and Eurasian plates, mostl...
The present-day topography in Iberia is related to geodynamic processes dealing with lithospheric-sc...
This compilation of stratigraphic and structural data accompanying the (re)issue of the 1:50000 shee...
A synthesis of the development of the Variscan orogene, of which the present Cantabrian Mountains fo...
The Nansa-Deva map sheet of the Geological Map of the Southern Cantabrian Mountains is published. Th...
The Carboniferous Pisuerga basin developed north of the León line and as such is the most eastern on...
After a late-Precambrian folding, clastic deposits, partly continental, spread out over the region d...
The amalgamation of Pangea during the Carboniferous produced a winding mountain belt: the Variscan o...
Distinct general lithological features, separated by unconformities, serve to distinguish three grou...
The amalgamation of Pangea during the Carboniferous produced a winding mountain belt: the Variscan o...
The structure of the western termination of the Alpine Pyrenean-Cantabrian Orogen (NW Iberian Penins...