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Dive into the research topics where Jacques Verniers is active.

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Featured researches published by Jacques Verniers.


Geological Society, London, Special Publications | 2002

The Cambrian to mid Devonian basin development and deformation history of Eastern Avalonia, east of the Midlands Microcraton: new data and a review

Jacques Verniers; T. C. Pharaoh; L André; Timothy Debacker; W. De Vos; M. Everaerts; Alain Herbosch; J Samuelsson; Manuel Sintubin; M Vecoli

Abstract A review is given of recently published and new data on Avalonia east of the Midlands Microcraton. The three megasequences from Cambrian to mid Devonian described in Wales and Welsh Borderland are also present east of the Midlands Microcraton (Brabant Massif, Condroz, Ardennes, Remscheid and Ebbe inliers, Krefeld high). The three megasequences are caused by a tectonic driving mechanism and are explained by three different geodynamic contexts: an earlier phase with extensional basins or rifting and rather thick sequences, when Avalonia was still attached to Gondwana; a second phase with a shelf basin with moderately thin sequences when Avalonia was a separate continent and a later phase with a shelf or foreland basin development and thick sequences. Deformation of the megasequences 1 and 2 or 1 to 3 varies between areas. In Wales and the Lake District the Acadian phase is long-lived and active from early to mid Devonian. In the Ardennes inliers a deformation is active between the late Ordovician and the Silurian (Ardennian Phase), with a similar intensity as the core of the Brabant Massif, when present erosion levels are compared. The Brabant Massif is partly deformed by the long-lived Brabantian Phase from late Silurian till early mid Devonian. Both the Ardennes inliers and the Brabant Massif are not classic orogenic belts, only slate belts where no more than the epizone is reached at present erosion levels. Areas supposedly close to the microcraton or basement are nearly undeformed (SW Brabant Massif and central Condroz). A model of anticlockwise rotation of Avalonia of about 55° from Caradoc to Emsian is proposed to explain the deposition setting of megasequence 3 and the subsequent Acadian and Brabantian deformation. Immediately after the Avalonian microcontinent touched Baltica in Caradoc times it created a short-lived subduction magmatic event from The Wash to the Brabant Massif and soon after the magmatism ended a foreland basin developed. Possibly during and after that development a long-lived and slow compressional event occurred, leading to the deformation of the Anglo-Brabant Deformation Belt. In the early Devonian, contemporaneous with the shortening of the Anglo-Brabant Deformation Belt, extension occurred in the Rheno-Hercynian Zone, possibly caused by the same slow rotation of Avalonia. More evidence emerges that Avalonia east of the Midlands Microcraton comprises not one but probably two terranes: the remnant of the palaeocontinent Avalonia, and what is called the palaeocontinent Far Eastern Avalonia; the latter is only occasionally observed in the few deep boreholes into the Heligoland-Pomerania Deformation Belt, in southern Denmark, NE Germany and NW Poland, with scant available indirect data in between indicating only Proterozoic basement and no Caledonian deformation. For Far Eastern Avalonia a similar palaeogeographical history is postulated as Avalonia, with rifting from Gondwana in Arenig or earlier times, collision with Baltica before the mid-Ashgill and deformation between the late Ordovician and latest Silurian. The Avalonia concept might need to be expanded to an ‘Avalonian Terrane Assemblage’ with cratonic cores and small short-lived oceans as in the Armorican Terrane Assemblage.


Annales de la Société géologique de Belgique | 2009

Review of the Silurian in the Brabant Massif, Belgium

Jacques Verniers; Geert Van Grootel


Proceedings of the International Meeting on the Caledonides of the Midlands and the Brabant Massif | 1991

Guidebook to the excursion on the stratigraphy and magmatic rocks of the Brabant Massif, Belgium

Luc André; Alain Herbosch; Stephen Louwye; Thomas Servais; Geert Van Grootel; Michel Vanguestaine; Jacques Verniers


Palaeozoic Amalgamation of Central Europe | 2002

Lower Palaeozoic basin development and Caledonian deformation history in and around Belgium in the framework of Eastern Avalonia

Jacques Verniers; T. C. Pharaoh; Luc André; Timothy Debacker; W De Vos; M. Everaerts; Alain Herbosch; Joakim Samuelsson; Manuel Sintubin; M Vecoli


Annales de la Société Géologique de Belgique, 115(1) | 2009

The stratigraphy of the type locality of the ?Late Wenlock/Early Ludlow Mont Godart Formation and the Early Ludlow Ronquières Formation, Brabant Massif, Belgium

Stephen Louwye; Geert Van Grootel; Jacques Verniers


Annales de la Société géologique de Belgique | 2009

Nouvelles données sur la Bande de Sambre-et-Meuse à Ombret (Huy, Belgique)

Luc Hance; Philippe Steemans; Eric Goemaere; Yvonne Somers; Georges Vandenven; Michel Vanguestaine; Jacques Verniers


Acta Universitatis Carolinae. Geologica | 1999

The Ordovician in Belgium: new litho- and biostratigraphical data with Chitinozoa from the Brabant Massif and the Condroz Inlier (Belgium)

Jacques Verniers; J Samuelsson; G Van grootel; P De Geest; Alain Herbosch


Proceedings of the International Meeting on the Caledonides of the Midlands and the Brabant Massif | 1991

Introduction to the International Meeting on the Caledonides of the Midlands and the Brabant Massif

Jacques Verniers; Luc André; Alain Herbosch; Michel Vanguestaine


Archive | 2016

Palynology and palaeogeography of the middle Přídolí from Saudi Arabia

Philippe Steemans; Pierre Breuer; S. Al-Hajri; A. Le Hérissé; Florentin Paris; Jacques Verniers; Charles H. Wellman


Archive | 2016

Biostratigraphy of the JLMD-EW8 borehole and palaeogeographic interpretation

Philippe Steemans; Pierre Breuer; S. Al-Hajri; A. Le Hérissé; Florentin Paris; Jacques Verniers; Charles H. Wellman

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Alain Herbosch

Université libre de Bruxelles

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Florentin Paris

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Luc André

Royal Museum for Central Africa

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Manuel Sintubin

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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