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Terrane amalgamation in the Clew Bay region, west of Ireland
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 May 2009
Abstract
The Caledonides of the west of Ireland provide a well-exposed and well-mapped example of an oblique collision zone. The east-northeast trending Deer Park and Achill Beg Fault system is a crustal scale ductile sinistral strike-slip duplex of late Ordovician age, imbricating late Precambrian granulite facies lower crustal rocks, near eclogite facies supracrustal rocks, up to amphibolite facies Dalradian metasedimentary rocks and greenschist facies Cambro-Ordovician rocks. This fault system is correlated with a pre-Devonian component of the Highland Boundary Fault system in southern Scotland. In the Clew Bay area, the high pressure-low temperature facies metamorphic rocks, in tectonic contact with greenschist facies Cambro-Ordovician rocks, are together interpreted as an accretionary prism complex related to northwestward directed subduction. Both of these are allocthonous terrains with respect to the Dalradian terrane to the north (North West Mayo). To the south, the Cambro-Ordovician rocks docked with a probable Dalradian block containing ultramafic intrusives (Deer Park Complex) during the late Ordovician. The Deer Park Complex and South Mayo Trough linked earlier, during the Arenig.
Silurian and Lower-Middle Devonian redbed successions sit unconformably on the metamorphic rocks. Deposition and deformation of these cover rocks was controlled by oblique strike-slip movements on the Leek Fault whose strike swings from west-northwest to north-northeast, following earlier basement trends, as it is traced eastwards from Clew Bay. The Leek Fault System may be correlated with the Leannan Fault of northwest Donegal, a splay of the Great Glen Fault system of central Scotland. East of Clew Bay, this sinistral shear generated local dilation on the more northerly trending bend of the Leek Fault. Lower and Middle Old Red Sandstone redbeds were developed here. The west-northwest trend of the Leek Fault in Clew Bay acted as a compressional bend during these sinistral movements and transpressional southwest directed thrusting developed in Silurian rocks. Post-Middle Old Red Sandstone pre-late Tournaisian dextral displacement on the Leek Fault reversed this pattern with transtension in Clew Bay allowing intrusion of small carbonated peridotite bodies into Silurian rocks and easterly directed thrusting of Middle Old Red Sandstone rocks east of the Bay on the transpressional north-south bend.
A tectonic model for the region is presented here. This model involves a northwestward directed subduction system, 150 to 750 km of Arenig sinistral strike slip movement, and eastwards insertion of the Connemara block with formation of the Ordovician South Mayo Trough as a pull-apart basin. Subsequently, a further 130 to 650 km eastward displacement of rocks took place south of the Deer Park Fault in later Ordovician times. The magnitudes of these estimates are directly proportional to an assumed maximum wavelength of 1500 km for promontories on the original Laurentian margin, and using the current juxtaposition of terranes, a minimum wavelength of 300 km is inferred.
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