Hostname: page-component-8448b6f56d-tj2md Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-18T02:53:10.569Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Igneous stratigraphy and internal structure of the Little Minch Sill Complex, Trotternish Peninsula, northern Skye, Scotland

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 May 2009

Sally A. Gibson
Affiliation:
School of Geological Sciences, Kingston Polytechnic, Kingston upon Thames, KT1 2EE, U.K.
Adrian P. Jones
Affiliation:
School of Geological Sciences, Kingston Polytechnic, Kingston upon Thames, KT1 2EE, U.K.

Abstract

Detailed sampling of the Little Minch Sill Complex reveals that it is composed of both single and multiple sills. These are formed of three main, genetically related units: picrite, picrodolerite and crinanite, which are the result of differentiation of an alkali-olivine basalt magma (approximately 10% MgO) in an upper-crustal magma chamber. Variations in igneous stratigraphy and the presence of internal chills in the Trotternish sills suggest that they were emplaced by multiple intrusion and subsequently differentiated in situ. Changes in petrography adjacent to pegmatite veins and textures within picrite units indicate compaction and filter-pressing were important processes after emplacement. Rhythmic layering (1 cm to 1 m thick) is conspicuous in the sills near contacts but does not involve cryptic mineral variation. Such modal layering may be more common than realised in relatively small-scale intrusions and maybe modelled in terms of in situ differentiation under conditions of significant undercooling in a changing thermal gradient at the synthetic for-sterite-diopside-anorthite eutectic.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1991

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

Anderson, F. W. & Dunham, K. C. 1966. The Geology of Northern Skye. Memoirs of the Geological Survey.Google Scholar
Barriere, M. 1976. Flowage differentiation: limitation of the ‘Bagnold effect’ to narrow intrusions. Contributions to Mineralogy andPetrology 55, 139–45.Google Scholar
Bell, B. R. & Harris, J. W. 1986. An Excursion Guide to the Geology of the Isle of Skye. Geological Society of Glasgow.Google Scholar
Blake, S. & Ivey, G. I. 1986. Density and viscosity gradients in zoned magma chambers, and their influence on withdrawal dynamics. Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research 30, 201–30.Google Scholar
Brown, G. M. 1969. The Tertiary Igneous Geology of the Isle of Skye. Geologists' Association Guide No. 13.Google Scholar
Bryan, W. B., Finger, L. W. & Chayes, F. 1969. Estimating proportions in petrographic mixing equations by least squares approximation. Science 163, 1926–7.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Basaltic Volcanism Study Project (BVSP). 1981. Basalt Volcanism on the Terrestrial Planets. Pergamon.Google Scholar
Carmichael, I. S. E., Turner, F. J. & Verhoogen, J. 1974. Igneous Petrology. New York: McGraw-Hill.Google Scholar
Chesher, J. A., Smythe, D. K. & BISHOP, P. 1983. The Geology of the Minches, Inner Sound and Raasay. Institute of Geological Sciences Report, 83/6.Google Scholar
Donaldson, C. H. 1976. An experimental investigation of olivine morphology. Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology 57, 187213.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Drever, H. I. 1953. A note on the field relations of the Shiant Isles picrite. Geological Magazine 90, 159–60.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Drever, H. I. & Johnston, R. 1957. A note on the occurrence of rhythmic layering in the Eilean Mhuire sill, Shiant Isles. Geological Magazine 94, 277–80.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Drever, H. I. & Johnston, R. 1959. The lower margin of the Shiant Isles sill. Quarterly Journal of the Geological Society of London 94, 343–65.Google Scholar
Drever, H. I. & Johnston, R. 1965. New petrographical data on the Shiant Isles picrite. Mineralogical Magazine 34, 194203.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Drever, H. I. & Johnston, R. 1967. The ultrabasic facies in some sheets and sills. In Ultramafic and Related Rocks (ed. Wyllie, P. J.), pp. 5163. New York: Wiley.Google Scholar
Dunham, A. C. 1965. A new type of banding in ultrabasic rocks from central Rhum, Inverness-shire Scotland. American Mineralogist 50, 1410–20.Google Scholar
Frey, F. A., Green, D. H. & Roy, S. D. 1978. Integrated models of basalt petrogenesis: a study of quartz tholeiites to olivine melilitites from South Australia utilizing geochemical and experimental petrological data. Journal of Petrology 19, 463513.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gibb, F. G. F. 1973. The zoned clinopyroxenes of the Shiant Isles sill, Scotland. Journal of Petrology 14, 203–30Google Scholar
Gibb, F. G. F. & Gibson, S. A. 1989. The Little Minch Sill Complex. Scottish Journal of Geology 25, 367–70.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gibb, F. G. F. & Henderson, C. M. B. 1984. The structure of the Shiant Isles sill complex, Outer Hebrides. Scottish Journal of Geology 20, 21–9.Google Scholar
Gibb, F. G. F. & Henderson, C. M. B. 1989. Discontinuities between picritic and crinanitic units in the Shiant Isles sill: evidence of multiple intrusion. Geological Magazine 126, 127–37.Google Scholar
Gibson, S. A. 1990. The geochemistry of the Trotternish sills, Skye, Scotland: crustal contamination in the British Tertiary Volcanic Province. Journal of the Geological Society, London 147, 1071–81.Google Scholar
Huppert, H. E. & Sparks, R. S. J. 1989. Chilled margins in igneous rocks. Earth and Planetary Science Letters 92, 397405.Google Scholar
Murray, R. J. 1954. The clinopyroxenes of the Garbh Eilean sill, Shiant Isles. Geological Magazine 91, 1731.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Murata, K. J. & Richter, D. H. 1976. The 1959–1960 eruptions of Kilauea volcano, Hawaii; chemistry of the lavas. U.S. Geological Survey Professional Paper 537A, 126.Google Scholar
Nash, W. P. & Wilkinson, J. F. G. 1970. Shonkin Sag Laccolith, Montana. 1. Mafic minerals and estimates of temperature, pressure, oxygen fugacity and silica-activity. Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology 25, 241–69.Google Scholar
Roeder, P. L. & Emslie, R. F. 1970. Olivine-liquid equilibrium. Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology 29, 275–89.Google Scholar
Simkin, T. 1967. Flow differentiation in the picritic sills of north Skye. In Ultramific and Related Rocks (ed. Wyllie, P. J.), pp.64. New York: Wiley.Google Scholar
Sparks, R. S. J., Huppert, H. E., Kerr, R. C., McKenzie, D. P. & Tait, S. R. 1985. Postcumulus processes in layered intrusions. Geological Magazine 122, 555–68CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wager, L. R. & Brown, G. M. 1967. Layered Igneous Rocks. Edinburgh: Oliver & Boyd.Google Scholar
Walker, F. 1930. The geology of the Shiant Isles (Hebrides). Quarterly Journal of the Geological Society, London 86, 355–98.Google Scholar
Walker, F. 1931. The dolerite isles of the North Minch. Transactions of the Royal Society of Edinburgh 56, 753–66.Google Scholar
Walker, F. 1932. Differentiated sills of Northern Trotternish (Skye). Transactions of the Royal Society of Edinburgh 57, 241–57.Google Scholar
Wilkinson, J. F. G. 1957. The clinopyroxenes of a differentiated sill near Guennedah, New South Wales. Geological Magazine 94, 123–34.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Young, I. M. & Donaldson, C. H. 1985. Formation of granular layers within the Rhum crystal pile. Geological Magazine 122, 519–28.Google Scholar