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  • 1
    Publication Date: 1974-01-01
    Print ISSN: 0376-8929
    Electronic ISSN: 1469-4387
    Topics: Biology
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2000-01-01
    Description: The consensus of several geochemical studies is a polygenetic origin for the basic volcanic sequence within the Ballantrae Complex ophiolite. This overall agreement masks differences of opinion regarding local geochemical interpretation, the possible correlation of structurally isolated lava tracts, and the degree of structural imbrication responsible for the juxtaposition of the various lava types. Newly acquired data (XRF, INAA, ICP-MS) provide the best evidence yet obtained for the presence of a MORB component and establish a wider distribution for primitive tholeiitic basalts with plate-margin characteristics than had been previously reported. The two principal within-plate sequences (well established from extensive coastal outcrop) are geochemically indistinguishable, with one considered to be the deeper water equivalent of the other. Lithofacies and geochemical similarities encourage correlation of some inland and sparsely exposed examples of within-plate basalt with the well-exposed coastal sequences, and all of this lava type may have originated from a single, ocean island volcano. The diversity of outcrops formed in within-plate and plate-margin geotectonic settings is combined within a dynamic reconstruction of a Tremadoc to Arenig arc-trench system with an active back-arc spreading region. The new reconstruction reconciles for the first time all of the known geochemical and published isotopic age evidence.
    Print ISSN: 1755-6910
    Electronic ISSN: 1755-6929
    Topics: Geosciences
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2011-12-01
    Description: :Rare clasts of limestone contained in the uppermost Carboniferous Fitzroy Tillite Formation of the Falkland Islands contain a rich Cambrian fauna of archaeocyaths together with a radiocyath and a few trilobites. Neither Cambrian strata nor limestone are present in the indigenous rock succession and the clasts are regarded as exotic erratics, introduced during the Permo-Carboniferous glaciation of southern Gondwana, prior to its Mesozoic break-up. Nineteen archaeocyath taxa have been identified, with seven (plus a radiocyath) occurring in a single clast. Trilobite identifications are less definitive, but they are compared to Yorkella and the Siberian genera Edelsteinaspis, Namanoia and Chondrinouyina. The archaeocyath fauna has an Australo–Antarctic character and the Transantarctic Mountains seem the most likely source for these unusual erratics. Most recent reconstructions of Gondwana rotate a Falklands microplate into a position between South Africa and East Antarctica. There, it is in proximity with the Eastern Cape Province, where tillites within the Permo-Carboniferous Dwyka Group are correlatives of the Fitzroy Tillite Formation, and the ‘Atlantic’ end of the Transantarctic Mountains. The Dwyka Group tillites also contain rare clasts of archaeocyathan limestone and the rotational reconstruction produces a continuity of the apparent ice-flow directions in South Africa and the Falkland Islands.
    Print ISSN: 1755-6910
    Electronic ISSN: 1755-6929
    Topics: Geosciences
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2000-01-01
    Description: The progressive changes in the provenance of Silurian greywacke turbidites in the Southern Uplands terrane reflect geotectonic events at the Laurentian continental margin during closure of the Iapetus Ocean. In the northern Gala Group, juvenile andesitic detritus in some beds gives εNd values no lower than −4·2; more commonly, quartzo-feldspathic greywackes have εNd values in the −5·5 to −6·7 range, produced by the mixing of juvenile plutonic and Proterozoic basement detritus during arc unroofing. In the southern (younger) Gala Group, Proterozoic εNd values range down from −7·7 to −11·2 with only sporadic evidence for a juvenile component. An abrupt change is seen between the Gala Group and its tectonostratigraphical successor, the Hawick Group. In the latter, εNd values have a compact range between −4·7 and −6·6, indicating the renewed dominance of a more juvenile, plutonic provenance. Regional variations in the Sr/Rb ratio suggest that this was more evolved than the source of the Gala Group plutonic material. The Wenlock greywackes of the Riccarton Group have εNd values in the range −5·1 to −7·8, overlapping with the Hawick Group and with coeval greywackes from both the Midland Valley and Lakesman terranes. Overall, the data support proposals that the Iapetus Ocean had effectively closed by mid-Silurian times. Conversely, data from greywacke boulders in the basal Old Red Sandstone conglomerate of the Midland Valley terrane militate against its Wenlock juxtaposition with the Southern Uplands.
    Print ISSN: 1755-6910
    Electronic ISSN: 1755-6929
    Topics: Geosciences
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2000-01-01
    Description: Subduction-related accretion of fault-defined tracts built up the Southern Uplands terrane during the final stages of closure of the Iapetus Ocean (Llandovery to Wenlock). Contrasts in depositional environment and pronounced differences in geochemical composition, provenance studies and metamorphic grade across the Laurieston Fault between the Gala and Hawick groups, suggests that it has a greater regional significance than most other tract-bounding structures. Initiated by underthrusting, and acting as a locus for subsequent sinistral strike-slip, the fault overlies a regional gravity anomaly gradient that is interpreted to be due, in part, to a concealed NW-ward dipping shallow basement surface. This is modelled as an open ramp in the NE that steepens to a near-vertical step along-strike to the SW. A change in structural geometry noted at the Laurieston Fault, with excision of accretionary tracts, is related to a period of oblique closure of the Iapetus Ocean. The youngest Gala Group tracts were accreted during a period of intense transpression to form a regional strike-slip duplex over the shallow basement ramp with termination of the tracts at the Laurieston Fault, its surface expression. The ramp acted as an obstacle to forward-breaking thrust progress, forcing the out-of-sequence thrusting and repetitive thrust imbrication noted in the eastern Southern Uplands. Upper Palaeozoic reactivation of this basement structure may have transferred strain between extensional Permian basins.
    Print ISSN: 1755-6910
    Electronic ISSN: 1755-6929
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 1977-01-01
    Print ISSN: 0376-8929
    Electronic ISSN: 1469-4387
    Topics: Biology
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 1995-09-01
    Description: The Southern Uplands greywacke succession (Scotland) accumulated at the Laurentian margin of the Iapetus Ocean. It was sequentially incorporated into an imbricate, accretionary thrust complex until closure of the ocean. Thereafter the thrust belt propagated across the suture zone as a foreland thrust belt directed towards the hinterland of Avalonia. A foreland basin migrating ahead of the thrust belt was the depositional site for the southernmost Southern Uplands units and the Windermere Supergroup (English Lake District). A Nd-isotope study has shown that juvenile ophiolitic detritus was introduced into the oldest, mid-Ordovician, Southern Uplands greywackes before two distinct provenance areas evolved: one supplying juvenile andesitic detritus in addition to a quartzo-feldspathic component, the other Proterozoic and exclusively quartzo-feldspathic. Bimodal composition continued into the early Silurian but was overlapped from late in the Ordovician by greywackes with intermediate Nd-isotope composition. This was not a simple mixing effect since the andesitic component is not represented and the necessary juvenile component comes from granodioritic and felsitic lithologies. Intermediate eNd values are then a consistent feature through the Silurian both in the younger strata of the Southern Uplands and in the earliest foreland basin turbidites of the Windermere Supergroup. The transition suggests cessation of volcanicity and erosion of deeper levels of the provenance terrane(s), possibly linked to the evolution of the basin system from active margin, accretion-related, to a foreland setting. To the north of the Southern Uplands terrane, beyond the Southern Upland Fault, a Caradoc to Wenlock turbidite sequence occupies inliers within the Midland Valley. The older greywackes contain abundant juvenile ophiolite and plutonic detritus in addition to a quartzofeldspathic metamorphic component; there are similarities with the most northerly part of the Southern Uplands. From the late Ordovician, εNd values systematically decline so that early Llandovery Midland Valley greywackes are exclusively quartzo-feldspathic, derived from an ancient source indistinguishable in isotopic terms from that periodically supplying the Southern Uplands. In general the Llandovery Midland Valley provenance was significantly more mature than that contemporaneously supplying the Southern Uplands. Thereafter, the Midland Valley latest Llandovery and early Wenlock greywackes contain a higher proportion of a juvenile component, and by the early Wenlock, greywackes from the Midland Valley, Southern Uplands and Lake District terranes are similar in terms of εNd. A common provenance seems likely and suggests that by the mid-Silurian all three terrenes were in close proximity.
    Print ISSN: 0016-7568
    Electronic ISSN: 1469-5081
    Topics: Geosciences
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 1995-09-01
    Description: terrane (ter-rane’) A fault-bounded body of rock of regional extent, characterized by a geological history different from that of contiguous terranes. A terrane is generally considered to be a discrete allochthonous fragment of oceanic or continental material added to a craton at an active margin by accretion. A. G. I. Glossary of Geology. 3rd edition, 1987.
    Print ISSN: 0016-7568
    Electronic ISSN: 1469-5081
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  • 9
    Publication Date: 1993-09-01
    Description: The Skiddaw Group comprises a marine sedimentary sequence deposited on the northern margin of eastern Avalonia in Tremadoc to Llanvirn times. It is unconformably overlain by subduction-related volcanic rocks (the Eycott and Borrowdale Volcanic groups) of mid-Ordovician age, and foreland basin marine strata of late Ordovician and Silurian age. The Skiddaw Group has a complex deformation history. Syn-depositional deformation produced soft sediment folds and an olistostrome. Volcanism was preceded (in late Llanvirn to Llandeilo times) by regional uplift and tilting of the Skiddaw Group, probably caused by the generation of melts through subduction-related processes. The Acadian (late Caledonian) deformation event produced a northeast- to east-trending regional cleavage, axial planar to large scale folds, and a later set of southward-directed thrusts with associated minor folds and crenulation cleavages. This event affected the northern Lake District probably in the late Silurian and early Devonian. The Skiddaw Group structures contrast strongly with those formed during the same event in the younger rocks of the Lake District inlier. The contrasts are attributed to differing rheological responses to varying and possibly diachronous stresses, and to possible impedence of thrusting by the combined mass of the Borrowdale Volcanic Group and the Lake District batholith.
    Print ISSN: 0016-7568
    Electronic ISSN: 1469-5081
    Topics: Geosciences
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  • 10
    Publication Date: 1995-09-01
    Description: The Iapetus Suture (Solway) line coincides with a magnetic low, which lies between magnetic highs over southwestern Scotland and the Lake District-Isle of Man region. Although topography on deep magnetic basement can account for these long wavelength geophysical variations, an explanation which involves lateral basement magnetization contrasts is preferred on the basis of (a) correlations between inferred magnetization boundaries and major structures delineated from other evidence, and (b) the apparent westward continuation of the Solway low through Ireland and Newfoundland across areas with very different subsidence histories but similar position with respect to the collision of Laurentia and Avalonia. In the preferred model, relatively magnetic continental crust beneath the Southern Uplands and Lake District terranes is separated by a zone of less magnetic crust interpreted as sedimentary rock of Avalonian affinity carried to deeper structural levels within the Iapetus Suture Zone. The magnetic unit beneath the Southern Uplands is bounded to the south by the northward-dipping Iapetus Suture and to the north by a structure which may have been reactivated in late Caledonian times to produce the Moniaive Shear Zone in the overlying rocks; this unit may represent the ‘missing’ arc terrane inferred from provenance studies. Alternatively, the two magnetic basement domains may have originally been part of the same terrane, with that portion beneath the Southern Uplands rifting from the Avalonian continent during its northwards drift and being subsequently trapped in the hanging wall of the Iapetus Suture. The southern margin of the Lake District domain appears as a discontinuity in the magnetic anomaly pattern, with long wavelength anomalies to the south having a southeast ‘Tornquist’ trend.
    Print ISSN: 0016-7568
    Electronic ISSN: 1469-5081
    Topics: Geosciences
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