Mt. Genèvre Ophiolite, French Alps
Two Summers in the Alps That Changed Our View of the Earth
M. P. T. Chin-A-Lien – June 2026
Founding Partner & Chief Architect
GLIAG – Golden Lane Investments Advisory Group
During the summers of 1973 and 1974, four geology students from the University of Leiden, The Netherlands—Arie Schaap, André van der Meulen, Marcel Chin-A-Lien and Ray Bergval—spent nearly six months mapping the Montgenèvre–Chenaillet Ophiolite in the Cottian Alps of France and the Dora Maira Massif of Italy under the guidance of Prof. Dr. E. den Tex.
Our doctoraal fieldwork took us across one of the world’s best-preserved fragments of Jurassic oceanic lithosphere.
We mapped mantle peridotites, gabbros, sheeted dykes and pillow basalts, learning that these rocks once formed the floor of the ancient Ligurian–Piedmont Ocean.
During the Alpine collision, most of this oceanic crust disappeared into a subduction zone.
A small fragment escaped destruction, was obducted onto the continental margin and incorporated into the Alpine nappe system.
Today, erosion exposes this remarkable section at more than 2,650 metres above sea level.
For us, the Montgenèvre Ophiolite became much more than a thesis area.
It was a natural laboratory where the emerging theory of plate tectonics became reality beneath our boots.
More than fifty years later, the science remains timeless, the mountains remain magnificent, and the friendships remain unforgettable.
The photograph captures more than four young geology students.
It captures four Ophiolite Chasers, standing on the preserved upper mantle of an ocean that disappeared millions of years before humanity existed.
Dedicated to Prof. Dr. E. den Tex, and to my fellow field companions Arie Schaap, André van der Meulen and the late Ray Bergval, with gratitude for two unforgettable summers in the Alps.
“Turning Geoscience into Geological Intelligence.”
M. P.T. Chin-A-Lien
Founding Partner & Chief Architect
GLIAG – Golden Lane Investments Advisory Group
Annex – Montgenèvre–Chenaillet Ophiolite
Curated Geological, Geophysical and Geotectonic References
The Montgenèvre–Chenaillet ophiolite, straddling the French–Italian border, is widely recognized as one of the best‑preserved remnants of the Ligurian–Piedmont oceanic domain in the Western Alps. It exposes serpentinized mantle rocks, gabbros, volcanic sequences and sedimentary cover with comparatively limited Alpine metamorphic overprint, making it an exceptional natural laboratory for studying Jurassic oceanic crust, slow‑spreading ridge processes and the tectonic evolution of the Alpine Tethys.[insu.hal +3]
A. Selection Logic
The publications below were selected using four criteria:
• Direct relevance to the Montgenèvre–Chenaillet massif or Chenaillet ophiolite.
• Strong geological, petrological, geochemical, geochronological or geotectonic content.
• High value as either foundational references or modern reinterpretations.
B. Core Curated Reference List [1] [5] [6] [2] [3][7] [8] [9] [10] [11] [12] [4] [13]
| Priority | Reference | Main contribution | Why it is trusted / useful |
|---|---|---|---|
| Essential | Manatschal, N., Picazo, S., Müntener, O., et al. “The Chenaillet Ophiolite in the Western Alps.” | Modern synthesis of the Chenaillet–Montgenèvre ophiolite as a key remnant of the Piemont–Liguria oceanic basin. | Provides a comprehensive geological and tectonic overview; excellent starting point for context and significance. |
| Essential | Cordey, F. & Bailly, F. “Alpine ocean seafloor spreading and onset of pelagic sedimentation: new radiolarian data from the Chenaillet–Montgenèvre ophiolite.” | Radiolarian biostratigraphy constraining oceanic spreading and timing of pelagic sedimentation. | Crucial for age control on oceanic crust and sediment cover, and for integrating Chenaillet into the Alpine Tethys opening history. |
| Essential | Lemoine, M. et al. Le massif du Chenaillet. Montgenèvre (Alpes franco‑italiennes). Les ophiolites et l’océan disparu. | Regional synthesis and field‑oriented description of the Chenaillet–Montgenèvre massif and its ophiolitic context. | Classic French‑language reference widely cited in later work; indispensable for regional geology and field relationships. |
| Essential | Costa, S. & Caby, R. “Evolution of the Ligurian Tethys in the Western Alps: Sm/Nd and U/Pb geochronology and rare‑earth element geochemistry of the Montgenèvre ophiolite (France).” | Geochronology and REE geochemistry of the Montgenèvre ophiolite. | Key paper for temporal constraints and magmatic evolution of Ligurian Tethys oceanic crust. |
| Essential | Picazo, S., Cannat, M., Delacour, A., et al. “The Chenaillet Ophiolite in the French/Italian Alps: An ancient analogue for an Oceanic Core Complex?” | Interprets the Chenaillet ophiolite as an ancient oceanic core complex (OCC) in a magma‑poor spreading setting. | Highly relevant for modern tectonic models, slow‑spreading ridges and ocean–continent transition processes. |
| Important | Chalot‑Prat, F. et al. “L’ophiolite du Chenaillet (Montgenèvre, Alpes franco‑italiennes).” | Broad geological treatment of the Chenaillet ophiolite, including lithology and structural relationships. | Accessible French synthesis useful for petrography, structure and educational purposes. |
| Important | Pusztaszeri, L. Étude pétrographique du massif du Chenaillet (Hautes‑Alpes, France). | Early petrographic study of the massif. | Foundational historic petrographic reference frequently cited in subsequent work. |
| Important | Bertrand, J., Dietrich, V., Nievergelt, P., & Vuagnat, M. (major and trace element geochemistry of gabbroic and volcanic sequences, Montgenèvre ophiolite). | Comparative major and trace element geochemistry of gabbros and volcanic rocks. | Important for magmatic affinities and internal lithological comparisons within the ophiolite. |
| Important | Picazo, S. et al. “The Chenaillet Ophiolite: a fossil Oceanic Core Complex?” (EGU abstract). | Abstract‑level precursor to the full OCC interpretation. | Useful for tracing the development of OCC concepts applied to Chenaillet. |
| Important | Oceanic sedimentary processes and Alpine metamorphic events in the Chenaillet–Montgenèvre ophiolite. | Focuses on sedimentary processes and Alpine metamorphic overprint. | Valuable for distinguishing primary oceanic features from later Alpine modification. |
| Recent | “To be or not to be Alpine: New petrological constraints on the Chenaillet Ophiolite.” | New petrological constraints refining the extent of Alpine overprint. | Important modern reference for assessing preservation versus metamorphic reworking. |
| Supporting | “Nouvelle interprétation de l’ophiolite du Chenaillet.” | Updated or alternative structural/tectonic interpretation of the massif. | Useful as a comparative source where tectonic models differ, and for discussion of current debates. |
C. Recommended Thematic Use in Essays
D. Suggested Shortlist for Concise Citation
If only six to eight references can be included in a compact essay, a balanced shortlist would be:[insu.hal +1]
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