Geology of Belgium

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The geology of Belgium encompasses rocks, minerals and tectonic events stretching back more than 500 million years. Belgium covers an area of about 30,507 square kilometers and was instrumental in the development of geology. The extensive outcrops in Belgium became the standard reference points in stratigraphy as early as the mid-19th century. Some of them are internationally recognized features related to the Carboniferous and the Devonian periods. These rocks were folded by two mountain building events: the Hercynian orogeny and Caledonian Orogeny. Paleozoic basement rocks cover much of the country and are overlain by Mesozoic and Cenozoic sediments.[1]

Belgium is divided into three physiographic sections (lower, middle, and upper Belgium) extending from east to west. The middle part is composed Paleozoic rocks that are partially covered by Cenozoic sediments; while the upper part is made up of chains of rock related to the Caledonian orogeny and Hercynian orogeny. If the post-Paleozoic rock cover were to be removed from the basement complex, several other major rock groups would be exposed:

After the erosion of the Hercynian chain, there was a continuous intrusion of the basement rock by younger rocks and crustal warping. The evidence of Triassic and Permian sequences are visible in some of the boreholes in the Campine Belt, due to preservation by block faulting. The Jurassic outcrops found in the south-east of Ardennes are made up of littoral sandy facies of the Gaume (French Jurassic basin). In the Pays de Herve and Haine Gulf there are Cretaceous rocks found mainly in the gentle trough along the Condroz Fault.

Stratigraphy and Sedimentation

Economic geology

References

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