Author:
PIPER J. D. A.,STEPHEN J. C.,BRANNEY M. J.
Abstract
Late Ordovician volcanic rocks of the English Lake District
typically have a magnetic remanence
dominated by a single characteristic component. Previous investigations have
interpreted this remanence
as both of primary (pre-folding) and secondary origin. Palaeomagnetic
field tests have been
conducted on (a) andesite blocks from an autobrecciated lava top, (b)
andesite blocks in mass-flow breccias,
and (c) fault-blocks tilted during Ordovician caldera collapse to establish
the time of remanence acquisition.
All three tests show that the lavas retain a magnetization acquired during
initial cooling: magnetizations of
the breccias are coherent within clasts and random between clasts, whilst
magnetizations of the tilted fault
blocks converge with better that 95% confidence when corrected for the
effects of caldera collapse. In contrast,
the volcaniclastic sedimentary and pyroclastic rocks possess an
Ordovician secondary remanence
acquired after strata had been tilted by volcano-tectonic subsidence.
A distributed sample of 65 andesite and
basalt sheets through the Borrowdale Volcanic Group has a mean
remanence direction D/I=341.9/−48.9°
(α95=4.0°) yielding a positive fold test and a
palaeomagnetic pole at 12.7°E, 4.3°S (dp/dm=3.5/5.3°). A
progressive steepening of the palaeofield direction is recorded during
emplacement of the Borrowdale
Volcanic Group (∼I=−39° to I=−51°) which
continued into the interval of volcanotectonic overprinting
(I=−62°); the equivalent motion of Eastern Avalonia is
∼20° into higher southerly latitudes.Both the Eycott and Borrowdale volcanic groups exhibit uniform
normal polarity throughout. Correlation
with the geomagnetic time scale for the Ordovician restores the broad
correlation between the two groups by
constraining their emplacement and partial overprinting to a single
long normal polarity chron occupying
the Nemagraptus gracilis and earlier part of the Diplograptus
multidens biozones (late Llandeilo and early
Caradoc). All the volcanism, therefore, occurred within a period of no
more than ∼5 Ma. The palaeomagnetic
evidence confirms that the Borrowdale Volcanic Group was affected by both
syn-volcanic deformation
(caldera collapse) and regional compressive deformation prior to
deposition of the (late
Ordovician–Silurian) Windermere Supergroup. The succession of
primary and secondary Ordovician
palaeomagnetic poles from the Lake District inlier defines an anticlockwise
apparent polar wander (APW)
loop with the apex correlating with ‘soft’ closure of the
Iapetus Ocean and late Ordovician deformation. The
APW paths from Avalonia and Baltica converge at this point as subduction
ceased and the arc subsided beneath the sea after mid-Caradoc times.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Cited by
14 articles.
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