Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-gvvz8 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-23T06:51:09.621Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Evolution of Ordovician terranes in western Ireland and their possible Scottish equivalents

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  03 November 2011

D. M. Williams
Affiliation:
Department of Geology, University College Galway, Galway, Ireland

Abstract

In the W of Ireland the Ordovician rocks of South Mayo and Clew Bay are now juxtaposed but a comparison of the sedimentary histories of these two sequences shows that they accumulated in basins which were probably separated during most of their history. The large amount of terrigenous detritus present in the Arenig to Llanvirn elements of the South Mayo succession is not manifest in that of Clew Bay until the Llandeilo/Caradoc, by which time sedimentation in South Mayo had ceased. A comparison of the South Mayo Ordovician with that of Girvan in Scotland demonstrates that both sequences had a similar provenance. This source contained an ophiolite, granites and some (probably pre-Dalradian) metamorphic rocks. Sediment dispersal directions for the two sequences are opposite in sense, being primarily northward in South Mayo and southward at Girvan. The two stratigraphies indicate that basement subsidence behaviour in South Mayo was virtually the opposite of that at Girvan where initial shallow water sedimentation was rapidly succeeded by deep water environments at the end of the Llanvirn. The two basins may thus have been marginal to a single Ordovician arc complex. One reason for the opposite sense of basin subsidence may lie in the suggested reversal of subduction polarity during the Ordovician. In this scenario the South Mayo basin may be envisaged as lying to the N of a northward-facing arc during the early Ordovician. A new, northward, subduction direction instigated during the Llanvirn, resulted in a fore-arc basin at Girvan complemented by a closing back-arc basin in South Mayo.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Royal Society of Edinburgh 1990

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Archer, J. B. 1977. Llanvirn stratigraphy of the Galway-Mayo border area, western Ireland. GEOL J 12, 7798.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bassett, M. G. 1984. Lower Palaeozoic Wales-a review of studies in the past 25 years. PROC GEOL ASSOC 95, 291311.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bluck, B. J. 1982. Hyalotuff deltaic deposits in the Ballantrae ophiolite of SW Scotland: evidence for crustal position of lava sequence. TRANS R SOC EDINBURGH EARTH SCI 72, 217228.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bluck, B. J. 1983. Role of the Midland Valley of Scotland in the Caledonian orogeny. TRANS R SOC EDINBURGH EARTH SCI 74, 119136.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bluck, B. J. 1984. Pre-Carboniferous history of the Midland Valley, of Scotland. TRANS R SOC EDINBURGH EARTH SCI 75, 272295.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bluck, B. J. 1985. The Scottish paratectonic Caledonides. SCOTT J GEOL 21, 437464.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bluck, B. J. & Leake, B. E. 1986. Late Ordovician to early Silurian amalgamation of the Dalradian and adjacent Ordovician rocks in the British Isles. GEOLOGY 14, 917919.2.0.CO;2>CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Curry, G. B., Bluck, B. J., Burton, C. J., Ingham, J. K., Siveter, D. J. & Williams, A. 1984. Age, evolution and tectonic history of the Highland Border Complex, Scotland. TRANS R SOC EDINBURGH EARTH SCI 75, 113133.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dewey, J. F. 1963. The Lower Palaeozoic stratigraphy of central Murrisk, County Mayo, Ireland, and the evolution of the South Mayo Trough. Q J GEOL SOC LONDON 119, 313344.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dewey, J. F. & Shackleton, R. M. 1984. A model for the evolution of the Grampian tract in the early Caledonides and Appalachians. NATURE 312, 115121.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Graham, J. R. 1987. The nature and field relations of the Ordovician Maumtrasna Formation, County Mayo, Ireland. GEOL J 22, 347369.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hamilton, W. B. 1988. Plate tectonics and island arcs. GEOL SOC AM BULL 100, 15031527.2.3.CO;2>CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Harland, W. B., Cox, A. V., Llewellyn, P. G., Pickton, C. A. G., Smith, A. G. & Walters, R. 1982. A geologic time scale. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Harper, D. A. T. 1982. The stratigraphy of the Drummuck Group (Ashgill), Girvan. GEOL J 17, 251257.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Harper, D. A. T., Williams, D. M. & Armstrong, H. A. 1989. Stratigraphical correlations adjacent to the Highland Boundary Fault in the west of Ireland. J GEOL SOC LONDON 146, 381384.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hutton, D. H. W. 1987. Strike-slip terranes and a model for the evolution of the British and Irish Caledonides. GEOL MAG 124, 405425.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hutton, D. H. W., Aftalion, M. & Halliday, A. N. 1985. An Ordovician ophiolite in County Tyrone, Ireland. NATURE 315, 210212.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hutton, D. H. W. & Dewey, J. F. 1986. Palaeozoic terrane accretion in the western Irish Caledonides. TECTONICS 5, 11151124.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ince, D. 1984. Sedimentation and tectonism in the Middle Ordovician of the Girvan district, SW Scotland. TRANS R SOC EDINBURGH EARTH SCI 75, 225237.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ingham, J. K. 1978. Geology of a continental margin. 2: middle and late Ordovician transgression, Girvan. In Bowes, D. R. & Leake, B. E. (eds) Crustal evolution in northwestern Britain and adjacent regions, 163176. GEOL J SPEC ISSUE 10.Google Scholar
Kelly, T. J. & Max, M. D. 1979. The geology of the northern part of the Murrisk Trough. PROC R IRISH ACAD B 79, 192206.Google Scholar
Leggett, J. K., McKerrow, W. S. & Soper, N. J. 1983. A model for the crustal evolution of southern Scotland. TECTONICS 2, 187210.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
McManus, J. 1972. The stratigraphy and structure of the lower Palaeozoic rocks of eastern Murrisk, Co. Mayo. PROC R IRISH ACAD B 72, 307333.Google Scholar
Odin, G. S. 1982. The Phanerozoic time scale revisited. EPISODES 1982, 33–9.Google Scholar
Phillips, W. E. A. 1973. The pre-Silurian rocks of Clare Island, Co. Mayo, Ireland, and the age of the metamorphism of the Dalradian in Ireland. J GEOL SOC LONDON 129, 585606.Google Scholar
Phillips, W. E. A., Stillman, C. J. & Murphy, T. 1976. A Caledonian plate tectonic model. J GEOL SOC LONDON 132, 579605.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pickering, K. T., Bassett, M. G. & Siveter, D. J. 1988. Late Ordovician-early Silurian destruction of the Iapetus Ocean: Newfoundland, British Isles and Scandinavia-a discussion. TRANS R SOC EDINBURGH EARTH SCI 79, 361382.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pudsey, C. J. 1984. Ordovician stratigraphy and sedimentology of the South Mayo inlier. IRISH J EARTH SCI 6, 1545.Google Scholar
Rushton, A. & Phillips, W. E. A. 1973. A specimen of Protospongia hicksi from the Dalradian of Clare Island, Co. Mayo, Ireland. PALAEONTOLOGY 16, 223230.Google Scholar
Ryan, P. D., Floyd, P. A. & Archer, J. B. 1980. The stratigraphy and petrochemistry of the Lough Nafooey Group (Tremadocian), western Ireland. J GEOL SOC LONDON 137, 443458.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sanderson, D. J. & Marchini, W. R. D. 1984. Transpression. J STRUCT GEOL 6, 449458.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Smellie, J. L. 1984. Accretionary lapilli and highly vesiculated pumice in the Ballantrae ophiolite complex: ashfall products of subaerial eruptions. REP BR GEOL SURV 84/1.Google Scholar
Smethurst, M. A. & Briden, J. C. 1988. Palaeomagnetism of Silurian sediments in W Ireland: evidence for block rotation in the Caledonides. GEOPHYSICAL J 95, 327346.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Taira, A., Okada, H., Whitaker, J. H. McD & Smith, A. J. 1982. The Shimanto Belt of Japan: Cretaceous-lower Miocene active-margin sedimentation. In Leggett, J. K. (ed.) Trenchforearc geology: sedimentation and tectonics on modern and ancient active plate margins, 526. SPEC PUBL GEOL SOC LONDON 10.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Walton, E. K. 1983. Lower Palaeozoic-stratigraphy. In Craig, G. Y. (ed.) Geology of Scotland, 105137. Edinburgh: Scottish Academic Press.Google Scholar
Williams, A. & Curry, G. B. 1985. Lower Ordovician Brachiopoda from the Tourmakeady Limestone, Co. Mayo, Ireland. BULL BR MUS NAT HIST (GEOL) 38, 183269.Google Scholar
Williams, D. M. 1984. The stratigraphy and sedimentology of the Ordovician Partry Group, southeastern, Murrisk, Ireland. GEOL J 19, 173186.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Williams, D. M., Armstrong, H. A. & Harper, D. A. T. 1988. The age of the South Connemara Group, Ireland, and its relationship to the Southern Uplands zone of Scotland and Ireland. SCOTT J GEOL 24, 279287.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Williams, D. M. & Harper, D. A. T. 1988. A basin model for the Silurian of the Midland Valley of Scotland and Ireland. J GEOL SOC LONDON 145, 741748.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Williams, D. M. & Rice, A. H. N. 1989. Low-angle extensional faulting and the emplacement of the Connemara Dalradian, Ireland. TECTONICS 8, 417428.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Woodcock, N. H. & Fischer, M. 1986. Strike-slip duplexes. J STRUCT GEOL 8, 725737.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wrafter, J. P. & Graham, J. R. 1989. Ophiolitic detritus in the Ordovician sediments of South Mayo, Ireland. J GEOL SOC LONDON 146, 213215.Google Scholar