Author:
MILLWARD D.,BEDDOE-STEPHENS B.,YOUNG B.
Abstract
The Ordovician sedimentary and igneous rocks of the English Lake
District host a widespread
suite of epigenetic metalliferous veins dominated by copper sulphides with
abundant arsenopyrite,
pyrite and accessory galena and sphalerite. New field and microstructural
evidence from examples
of this suite at Coniston, Wasdale, Honister, Newlands and Borrowdale shows
that the veins were
strongly cleaved during the Early Devonian (Emsian) Acadian orogenic event.
The principal evidence
includes the continuity of wall-rock cleavage fabrics with pressure solution
seams in the veins and consistently
orientated cleavage through enclosed, rotated wall-rock fragments and chloritic
mats. There is
also widespread complex intracrystalline deformation in quartz, cataclasis
of arsenopyrite and pyrite,
fracturing and/or buckling of bladed hematite, and growth of quartz
or mica-fibre strain fringes.
Chalcopyrite was partially or totally remobilized, enabling it to migrate
along quartz crystal boundaries,
and invade brecciated pyrite. Previous K–Ar Early Devonian age determinations
for the mineralization
are considered to have been reset. The pre-Acadian age of this mineralization,
its style and
relationship to the volcanic rocks permits a genetic link with the final
phases of Caradoc magmatism.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Cited by
5 articles.
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