Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-v5vhk Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-06-24T10:58:12.216Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Compositional variation in Lower Old Red Sandstone detrital garnets from the Midland Valley of Scotland and the Anglo-Welsh Basin

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 May 2009

P. D. W. Haughton
Affiliation:
Department of Geology, University of Glasgow, Glasgow G12 8QQ, Scotland, U.K.
C. M. Farrow
Affiliation:
Department of Geology, University of Glasgow, Glasgow G12 8QQ, Scotland, U.K.

Abstract

Compositional variation in Lower Old Red Sandstone (ORS) detrital garnets can be used to evaluate potential source areas and to trace the pattern of early Devonian sediment dispersal. Garnets in northwesterly derived fans along the northern flank of the Midland Valley appear to duplicate spatial variation in the compositions of garnets in the adjacent Dalradian block. Whilst metamorphic clasts ‘resembling’ Dalradian lithologies occur in these fanglomerates, the strike-extent of Dalradian-type crust (c. 1000 km) makes simply matching the clasts a rather imprecise way of constraining source–basin displacement. The garnet data imply that the Ordovician separation inferred for crustal blocks juxtaposed along the Highland Boundary was removed by early Devonian times. Major Silurian displacements are thus invoked along the Highland Boundary with amalgamation largely achieved prior to the ‘Acadian’ transcurrent deformation seen in the slate belts to the south. Vertical changes in the composition of garnets in the thick Lower ORS sequence in the northeast Midland Valley are slight and it is not known to what extent these reflect migration of a differentiated source block or the involvement of recycled additions which become increasingly important towards the base of the ORS succession. The axially dispersed sandstones which interdigitate with the northwesterly derived fans are dominated by spessartine-rich almandines which resemble garnets fed laterally to the basin in the northwest Midland Valley. Although the large scale inferred for the axial fluvial system suggests that its drainage basin extended outside Scotland, almandine-pyropes which might have come from exhumed eclogites in western Norway are absent. Such compositions are widespread in Mesozoic sandstones in the northern North Sea and it is evident that these sediments do not represent the final repository for the 'lost' sediment stripped from Caledonian metamorphic terranes in Scotland. Garnet populations from the Anglo-Welsh Basin do not resemble those in the coeval axial sandstones of the Midland Valley, suggesting that the two basins were not linked at this time. The scale of the Midland Valley axial sandbodies are inconsistent with internal drainage of central Scotland and a route to the early Devonian shoreline must be sought. It may be that 'Acadian' strike-slip motions have displaced the Scottish basins from the coastal alluvial plains they originally fed.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1989

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

Allen, J. R. L. 1965. The sedimentation and palaeogeography of the Old Red Sandstone of Anglesey, North Wales. Proceedings of the Yorkshire Geological Society 35, 139–85.Google Scholar
Allen, J. R. L. 1974 a. Sedimentology of the Old Red Sandstone (Siluro-Devonian) in the Clee Hill area, Shropshire, England. Sedimentary Geology 12, 73167.Google Scholar
Allen, J. R. L. 1974 b. Source rocks of the Lower Old Red Sandstone: exotic pebbles from the Brownstones, Rosson-Wye, Hereford and Worcester. Proceedings of the Geologists' Association, London 85 493510.Google Scholar
Allen, J. R. L. & Crowley, S. F. 1983. Lower Old Red Sandstone fluvial dispersal systems in the British Isles. Transactions of the Royal Society of Edinburgh: Earth Sciences 74, 61–8.Google Scholar
Allen, J. R. L. & Dineley, D. L. 1976. The succession of the Lower Old Red Sandstone (Siluro-Devonian) along the Ross-Tewkesbury Spur Motorway (M50), Hereford and Worcester. Geological Journal 11, 114.Google Scholar
Armstrong, M. & Paterson, I. B. 1970. The Lower Old Red Sandstone of the Strathmore Region. Report of the Institute of Geological Sciences no. 70/12.Google Scholar
Atherton, M. P. 1968. The variation in garnet, biotite and chlorite composition in medium grade pelitic rocks from the Dalradian, Scotland, with particular reference to zonation in garnet. Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology 18, 347–71.Google Scholar
Atherton, M. P. & Brotherton, M. S. 1982. Major element composition of the pelites of the Scottish Dalradian. Geological Journal 17, 185221.Google Scholar
Baltatzis, E. 1979. Distribution of Fe and Mg between garnet and biotite in Scottish Barrovian metamorphic zones. Mineralogical Magazine 43, 155–7.Google Scholar
Blair, T. C. 1987. Tectonic and hydrologic controls on cyclic alluvial fan, fluvial and lacustrine rift-basin sedimentation, Jurassic-lowermost Cretaceous Toodos Santos Formation, Chiapas, Mexico. Journal of Sedimentary Petrology 57, 845–62.Google Scholar
Bluck, B. J. 1969. Old Red Sandstone and other Palaeozoic conglomerates of Scotland. In North Atlantic Geology and Continental Drift (ed. Kay, M.), pp. 711–23. Memoir of the American Association of Petroleum Geologists no. 12.Google Scholar
Bluck, B. J. 1984. Pre-Carboniferous history of the Midland Valley of Scotland. Transactions of the Royal Society of Edinburgh: Earth Sciences 75, 217–28.Google Scholar
Bluck, B. J. 1985. The Scottish paratectonic Caledonides. Scottish Journal of Geology 21, 437–64.Google Scholar
Bluck, B. J. 1988. Scale and facies structure of some alluvial lithosomes. Marine and Petroleum Geology (in press).Google Scholar
Campbell, R. 1913. The geology of southeastern Kincar-dineshire. Transactions of the Royal Society of Edinburgh 48, 923–60.Google Scholar
Cawood, P. A. 1983. Modal composition and detrital clinopyroxene geochemistry of lithic sandstones from the New England Fold Belt (east Australia): a Paleozoic fore-are terrane. Geological Society of America Bulletin 94, 1194–214.Google Scholar
Chinner, G. A. 1960. Pelitic gneisses with varying ferrous-ferric ratios from Glen Clova, Angus, Scotland. Journal of Petrology 1, 178217.Google Scholar
Chinner, G. A. 1965. The kyanite isograd in Glen Clova, Angus, Scotland. Mineralogical Magazine 34, 132–43.Google Scholar
Deer, W. A., Howie, R. A. & Zussman, J. 1966. An Introduction to the Rock-Forming Minerals. London: Longman.Google Scholar
Deer, W. A., Howie, R. A. & Zussman, J. 1982. Rock-Forming Minerals, Vol 1A: Orthosilicates. London: Longman.Google Scholar
Dempster, T. J. 1985. Garnet zoning and metamorphism of the Barrovian Type Area, Scotland. Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology 89, 30–8.Google Scholar
Dempster, T. J. & Harte, B. 1986. Polymetamorphism in the Dalradian of the central Scottish Highlands. Geological Magazine 123, 95104.Google 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, 115–20.Google Scholar
Edwards, D. & Richardson, J. B. 1974. Lower Devonian (Dittonian) plants from the Welsh Borderland. Palaeontology 17, 311–24.Google Scholar
Fettes, D. J., Graham, C. M., Harte, B. & Plant, J. A. 1986. Lineaments and basement domains: an alternative view of Dalradian evolution. Journal of the Geological Society of London 143, 453–64.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hansley, P. L. 1987. Petrological and experimental evidence for the etching of garnets by organic acids in the Upper Jurassic Morrison Formation, Northwestern New Mexico. Journal of Sedimentary Petrology 57, 824–30.Google Scholar
Haughton, P. D. W. & Bluck, B. J. 1988. Diverse alluvial sequences from the Lower Old Red Sandstone of the Strathmore Region, Scotland – implications for the relationship between late Caledonian tectonics and sedimentation. In Devonian of the World, Canadian Society of Petroleum Geologists Memoir no. 14 (in press).Google Scholar
House, M. R., Richardson, J. B., Chaloner, W. G., Allen, J. R. L., Holland, C. H. & Westoll, T. S. 1977. A Correlation of Devonian Rocks of the British Isles. Geological Society of London Special Report No. 8, 110 pp.Google Scholar
Hurst, A. & Morton, A. C. 1988. An application of heavymineral analysis to lithostratigraphy and reservoir modelling in the Oseberg Field, Northern North Sea. Marine and Petroleum Geology 5, 157–69.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hutton, D. H. W. 1987. Strike-slip terranes and a model for the evolution of the British and Irish Caledonides. Geological Magazine 124, 405–25.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jones, O. T. 1955. The geological evolution of Wales and the adjacent regions. Quarterly Journal of the Geological Society of London 111, 323–51.Google Scholar
Kennedy, D. A., Hamilton, P. J. & Fallick, A. E. 1987. Diagenesis and hydrothermal alteration of Lower ORS fluviatile sediments, Perth, Scotland (Abstract). Publications of the Department of Geology and Mineralogy, University of Aberdeen 6, 76.Google Scholar
Knowles, C. R. 1987. A basic program to recast garnet end members. Computers and Geosciences 13, 655–58.Google Scholar
Krogh, E. J., 1980. Geochemistry and petrology of glaucophane bearing eclogites and associated rocks from Sunnfjord, western Norway. Lithos 13, 355–80.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mange-Rajetsky, M. A. & Oberhansli, R. 1982. Detrital lawsonite and blue sodic amphibole in the Molasse of Savoy, France and their significance in assessing Alpine evolution. Schweizerische Mineralogische und Petrographische Mitteilungen 62, 415–36.Google Scholar
Medaris, L. G. Jr. 1980. Petrogenesis of the Lien peridotite and associated eclogites, Almklovdalen, western Norway. Lithos 13, 339–53.Google Scholar
Morton, A. C. 1984 a. Stability of detrital heavy minerals in Tertiary sandstones from the North Sea Basin. Clay Minerals 19, 287308.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Morton, A. C. 1984 b. Heavy minerals from Paleogene sediments, DSDP Leg 81; their bearing on stratigraphy, sediment provenance and the evolution of the North Atlantic. In Initial Reports of the Deep Sea Drilling Project Leg 81 (eds Roberts, D. G. and Schnitker, D.), 653–61. Washington: U.S. Government Printing Office.Google Scholar
Morton, A. C. 1985 a. A new approach to provenance studies: electron microprobe analysis of detrital garnets from middle Jurrassic sandstones of the northern North Sea. Sedimentology 32, 553–66.Google Scholar
Morton, A. C. 1985 b. Heavy minerals in provenance studies. In Provenance of Arenites (ed. Zuffa, G. G.), pp. 249–77. Dordrecht: Reidel.Google Scholar
Morton, A. C. 1987 a. Influences of provenance and diagenesis on detrital garnet suites in the Paleocene Forties sandstone, Central North Sea. Journal of Sedimentary Petrology 57, 1027–32.Google Scholar
Morton, A. C. 1987 b. Detrital garnets as provenance and correlation indicators in North Seas reservoir sandstones. In Petroleum Geology of North West Europe (eds Brooks, J. and Glennie, K. W.), pp. 991–6. London: Graham and Trotman.Google Scholar
Muller, G. & Schneider, A. 1971. Chemistry and genesis of garnets in metamorphic rocks. Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology 31, 178200.Google Scholar
Munro, M. 1986. Geology of the Country around Aberdeen. Memoir of the British Geological Survey Sheet 77 (Scotland). London: HMSO. 124 pp.Google Scholar
Murphy, F. C. 1985. Non-axial planar cleavage and Caledonian sinistral transpression in eastern Ireland. Geological Journal 20, 257–79.Google Scholar
Mysen, B. D. & Heier, K. S., 1972. Petrogenesis of eclogites in high grade metamorphic gneisses, exemplified by the Hareidland Eclogite, western Norway. Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology 36, 7394.Google Scholar
Nandi, K. 1967. Garnets as indices of progressive regional metamorphism. Mineralogical Magazine 36, 8993.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Owen, M. R. 1987. Hafnium content of detrital zircons, a new tool for provenance study. Journal of Sedimentary Petrology 57, 824–30.Google Scholar
Pettijohn, F. J. 1941. Persistence of heavy minerals and geological age. Journal of Geology 56, 112–18.Google Scholar
Simon, J. B. & Bluck, B. J. 1982. Palaeodrainage of the southern margin of the Caledonian mountain chain in the northern British Isles. Transactions of the Royal Society of Edinburgh: Earth Sciences 73, 1115.Google Scholar
Slatham, D. J. 1976. A comparative study of techniques for quantitative analysis of the x-ray spectra obtained with a Si(Li) detector. X-ray Spectrometry 15, 1628.Google Scholar
Soper, N. J., Webb, B. C. & Woodcock, N. H. 1987. Late Caledonian (Acadian) transpression in north-west England: timing, geometry and geotectonic significance. Proceedings of the Yorkshire Geological Society 46, 175–92.Google Scholar
Stewart, F. H. 1942. Chemical data on a silica-poor argillaceous hornfels and its constituent minerals. Mineralogical Magazine 26, 260–6.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sturt, B. A. 1962. The composition of garnets from pelitic schists in relation to the grade of regional metamorphism. Journal of Petrology 3, 181–91.Google Scholar
Walder, P. S. 1941. The petrography, origin and conditions of deposition of a sandstone of Downtonian age. Proceedings of the Geologists' Association 52, 245–56.Google Scholar
Watson, J. V. 1984. The ending of the Caledonian Orogeny in Scotland. Journal of the Geological Society of London 141, 193214.Google Scholar
Winchell, H. 1958. The composition and physical properties of garnet. American Mineralogist 43, 595600.Google Scholar