Stable isotope compositions of alteration fluids in low-grade Lower Palaeozoic rocks, English Lake District

1985 ◽  
Vol 49 (352) ◽  
pp. 425-434 ◽  
Author(s):  
L. J. Thomas ◽  
R. S. Harmon ◽  
G. J. H. Oliver

AbstractA combination of hydrogen and oxygen isotope analyses and fluid inclusion studies has defined the composition of fluids involved in the metamorphism of Lower Palaeozoic rocks in the English Lake District. Three fluid fields have been defined from secondary phases: 1, syn-burial metamorphic D-enriched fluids from epidote and chlorite at a temperature between 250 and 350°C; D-depleted fluid measured from groundmass and quartz inclusions; 3, a mixed magmatic-meteoric fluid with an intermediate H-isotopic composition estimated from W/R granite data and calculated from illite.

1977 ◽  
Vol 114 (3) ◽  
pp. 195-202 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. W. Dagger

SummaryAnalysis of the fracture pattern in the Coniston area of the Lake District indicates that copper mineralization is localized in a series of fractures produced during the main phase of deformation affecting the Borrowdale Volcanic Series. Three events are recognized on the basis of field and textural evidence obtained from polished sections: an early haematite mineralization, correlated with the low grade regional metamorphism affecting the rocks; the main phase of sulphide mineralization, with zoning, which is correlated with a granite intrusion at depth; and a late renewed movement on the veins, with carbonate mineralization, believed to be related to uplift of the granite.


1999 ◽  
Vol 14 (4) ◽  
pp. 447-458 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marguerite Munoz ◽  
Adrian J Boyce ◽  
Pierre Courjault-Rade ◽  
Anthony E Fallick ◽  
Francis Tollon

1993 ◽  
Vol 130 (2) ◽  
pp. 203-213 ◽  
Author(s):  
B. C. Kneller ◽  
A. M. Bell

AbstractThe structure of the southern and central English Lake District is that of a southeast-facing monocline, named here the Westmorland Monocline. This 10 km wide zone of highly cleaved, southeast-dipping rocks separates gently dipping, poorly cleaved Borrowdale Volcanic Group to the north from extensively folded but regionally subhorizontal Windermere Group (foreland basin) rocks to the south. The monocline formed early in the local Acadian deformation sequence, and accommodates at least 8 km of uplift. It coincides with the steep concealed margin of the Lake District batholith. A major northwest-dipping shear zone is revealed in the deepest levels now exposed within the monocline, in the Skiddaw Group rocks of the Black Combe inlier.The monocline has the characteristics of a mountain front, providing significant tectonic elevation across a foreland-dipping panel of rocks, with no hinterland-dipping thrust visible at the surface. We interpret the uplift as the consequence of a southeast-vergent thrust with a gently northwest-dipping ramp beneath the central Lake District, continuing southeastwards as a flat detachment beneath the Windermere Group. A displacement up the ramp of about 20 km is accommodated by backthrusting within the monocline and by shortening within the Windermere Group of the hangingwall southeast of the monocline. The tip lies beyond the limit of the Lower Palaeozoic inlier, beneath Carboniferous cover.


Clay Minerals ◽  
2006 ◽  
Vol 41 (1) ◽  
pp. 473-512 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. J. Merriman

AbstractLower Palaeozoic rocks crop out extensively in Wales, the Lake District of northern England and the Southern Uplands of Scotland; they also form the subcrop concealed beneath the English Midlands and East Anglia. These mainly marine sedimentary rocks were deposited in basins created during plate tectonic assembly of the various terranes that amalgamated to form the British Isles, 400-600 Ma ago. Final amalgamation occurred during the late Lower Devonian Acadian Orogeny when the basins were uplifted and deformed, producing belts of cleaved, low-grade metasediments, so-called slate belts, with a predominantly Caledonian (NE-SW) trend. The clay mineralogy of mudrock lithologies - including mudstone, shale and slate - found in these belts is reviewed. Using X-ray diffraction data from the <2 μm fractions of ~4500 mudrocks samples, clay mineral assemblages are summarized and discussed in terms of diagenetic and low-grade metamorphic reactions, and the metapelitic grade indicated by the Kübler index of illite crystallinity.Two sequences of clay mineral assemblages, or regional assemblages, are recognized. Regional Assemblage A is characterized by a greater diversity of clay minerals in assemblages from all metapelitic grades. It includes K-rich, intermediate Na/K and Na-rich white micas, chlorite and minor amounts of pyrophyllite. Corrensite, rectorite and pyrophyllite are found in the clay assemblages of contact or hydrothermally altered mudstones. K-white micas are aluminous and phengite-poor, with b cell dimensions in the range 8.98-9.02 Å. Regional Assemblage B has fewer clay minerals in assemblages from a range of metapelitic grades. Phengite-rich K-mica is characteristic whereas Na- micas are rare, and absent in most assemblages; chlorite is present and minor corrensite occurs in mudrocks with mafic-rich detritus. Minor amounts of kaolinite are sporadically present, but dickite and nacrite are rare; pyrophyllite and rectorite are generally absent. The b cell dimensions of K-white mica in Regional Assemblage B are in the range 9.02-9.06 Å. The two regional assemblages are found in contrasting geotectonic settings. Regional Assemblage A is characteristic of the extensional basin settings of Wales, the northern Lake District and the Isle of Man. These basins have a history of early burial metamorphism associated with extension, and syn-burial or post-burial intrusive and extrusive volcanic activity. Intermediate Na/K mica probably developed from hydrothermal fluids generated around submarine volcanic centres. Deep diagenetic and low anchizonal clay mineral in these basins may develop a bedding-parallel microfabric. Chlorite-mica stacks also occur in the extensional basins and the stacking planes represent another type of bedding-parallel microfabric. Both types of microfabric are non-tectonic and developed by burial during the extensional phase of basin evolution. Regional Assemblage B is developed in the plate-convergent settings of the Southern Uplands and the southern Lake District. In the accretionary complex of the Southern Uplands the processes of burial diagenesis, metamorphism and tectonism were synchronous events. In both plate- convergent basins, low temperatures and tectonic fabric-formation had an important role in clay mineral reactions, whereas hydrothermal fluids played no part in clay genesis.


2008 ◽  
Vol 146 (2) ◽  
pp. 237-251 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. J. KEMP ◽  
R. J. MERRIMAN

AbstractA series of boreholes in Horton Quarry, northwest Yorkshire (Horton-in-Ribblesdale Inlier) penetrated mudstones and slates belonging to the Austwick Formation (Windermere Supergroup) overlying laminated mudstones of the Ingleton Group. Illite (IC) and chlorite (ChC) crystallinity measurements indicate a metamorphic inversion between the two groups of mudrocks. The Windermere Supergroup mudrocks are mostly in the high anchizone or epizone, whereas the Ingletonian samples are lower grade in terms of IC, and are mostly deep diagenetic zone or low anchizone. Hence younger strata at higher grades rest on older strata at lower grades, creating a metamorphic inversion. Ingletonian slates exposed at Pecca Falls on the River Twiss show epizonal and anchizonal IC values, and greywacke samples from Ingleton Quarry contain pumpellyite. This suggests that grade in the Ingletonian may increase to the NW from the Horton to Ingleton inliers. K-white mica b cell dimensions show further differences between the Ingleton Group and the Windermere Supergroup. The Ingletonian samples are characterized by low b cell values (8.989–9.035, mean 9.007 Å), whereas the Windermere Supergroup has higher values in the range 9.022–9.034, mean 9.027 Å. The Windermere Supergroup values are similar to those recorded from the Windermere Supergroup of the southern Lake District, and Lower Palaeozoic rocks from the Scottish Southern Uplands, and are consistent with metamorphism in a low heat flow, convergent geotectonic setting. The Ingletonian b cell values suggest metamorphism in a higher heat flow setting, most likely an extensional basin. The metamorphic inversion at Horton and differences in K-white mica b cell dimensions suggest that the Ingleton Group and Windermere Supergroup strata evolved in different geotectonic settings and record two separate metamorphic events. The discovery of the metamorphic inversion at Horton provides further evidence in favour of an Ordovician rather than Neoproterozoic depositional age for the controversial Ingleton Group.


1969 ◽  
Vol 106 (6) ◽  
pp. 587-594 ◽  
Author(s):  
Douglas G. Helm

SUMMARYThe rocks of the Skiddaw Group of the Black Combe inlier were subjected to low grade regional metamorphism during the D1 movementphase of an intra-Lower Ordovician orogenic episode. Mimetic recrystallisation of clay minerals parallel to the bedding was ubiquitous. Later, axial-plane cleavages were superimposed on this fabric. The nature of the cleavages and possible mechanism of their formation is discussed.Silica has been mobilised on at least three occasions during the tectonic history of the inlier. In no case was this due to metasomatism but simply to metamorphic differentiation. The D1 veins are of either quartz, or quartz and chlorite whereas veins of later generations are of quartz alone.


1993 ◽  
Vol 130 (3) ◽  
pp. 369-377 ◽  
Author(s):  
Richard A. Hughes ◽  
Peter Kokelaar

AbstractVolcanic and hypabyssal intrusive rocks of the Lower Palaeozoic English Lake District and Cross Fell inliers are elements of the Ordovician destructive plate margin system of microcontinental Avalonia. Two igneous sheets within the marine sedimentary Skiddaw Group of these inliers, previously described as lavas, are reinterpreted as sills. Sedimentary rocks enclosing these sills are of late Tremadoc-early Arenig (c. 493 Ma) and early Llanvirn (> 476 Ma) age, and breccias along the upper contacts of both were produced by steam explosivity and fluidization ahead of theadvancing tips of the intrusions. Previous interpretation of the breccias on the older sheet, as sediment deposited on the eroded top of a lava flow, implied an early Ordovician onset of arc magmatism. Such early magmatism would have been virtually coincident with the latest Tremadoc initiation of arc magmatism in Wales, but evidence for such a near synchronous response tothe putative onset of subduction is lacking. Respective onsets of magmatismwere probably separated by at least 17 m.y., and possibly by as much as 29 m.y. The apparent contemporaneity of mid and late Ordovician volcanic episodes in England and Wales, and similarities in extensional tectonic style, suggest that the two areas then were part of the same subduction system responding similarly to plate-scale magma-generating and tectonic processes. The early Ordovician situation is uncertain, but the absence of arc volcanic rocks of this age in the English Lake District suggests that this area and Wales are not tectonically juxtaposed elements of a former simple linear arc.


1992 ◽  
Vol 129 (1) ◽  
pp. 77-92 ◽  
Author(s):  
David Millward ◽  
Stewart G. Molyneux

AbstractThe Eycott Volcanic Group of the Lake District Lower Palaeozoic inlier consists of basaltic and andesite and and andesite sheets and associated, mainly coarse, volcaniclastic rocks. The volcanic rocks have been regarded previously as interdigitated with, and equivalent in age to, mudrocks of the upper part of the Skiddaw Group (Tremadoc–Llanvirn). Microfloral evidence has been quoted in support of this interpretation, but has not been substantiated by re-assessment of the critical data. Furthermore, a recent examination of the base of the Eycott Volcanic Group has shown that it rests with angular unconformity on the Skiddaw Group. Skiddaw Group rocks beneath the unconformity range in age from possible late Cambrian to early Llanvirn. The lowest part of the Eycott Volcanic Group, the Over Water Formation, consists of siltstones and tuffaceous sandstones yielding a diverse microflora, and is intercalated with two andesite sheets interpreted herein as sills. Since the currently accepted Llanvirn age for the Eycott Volcanic Group cannot be confirmed, the volcanism may have been penecontemporaneous with the Llandeilo–Caradoc Borrowdale Volcanic Group episode. There are implications for a pre-volcanic tectonic deformation episode.


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