scispace - formally typeset
Journal ArticleDOI

Late Caledonian (Acadian) transpression in north-west England: timing, geometry and geotectonic significance

Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
In this article, it was shown that the deformation was not end-Silurian but of early Devonian age, climaxing in the Emsian and approximately synchronous with the Acadian orogeny of Canada.
Abstract
SUMMARY The late Caledonian structure of the Lower Palaeozoic slate belts which lie to the south of the Iapetus suture in Britain is not ‘Caledonoid’ (NE-SW) but characterised by arcuate trends. The significance of the major cleavage arc of northern England is the subject of this paper. Its exposed part, in the Lake District and adjacent inliers, is described and its regional extent inferred from the control exerted by Caledonian basement trends on early Carboniferous sedimentation patterns. The arc is shown to be a major feature of the orogen, marking a change from a NE-SW ‘Appalachian’ trend to the ESE-WNW ‘Tornquist’ trend of northern Germany and Poland. Evidence for the age of deformation in the British slate belts is reviewed. It is shown that the deformation was not ‘end-Silurian’ as previously supposed, but of early Devonian age, climaxing in the Emsian and approximately synchronous with the Acadian orogeny of Canada. The systematic variation in cleavage/fold transection angles around the arc is described and interpreted in terms of transpressive strains associated with the northward movement of a basement block, the Midlands Massif, which acted as a rigid indenter during accretion of the southern British terrane (Eastern Avalonia) onto the Laurentian margin. These new data on the timing and geometry of the Acadian accretion event in Britain go some way to resolving the current controversy concerning late Ordovician vs. Devonian closure of Iapetus.

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Palaeozoic terranes and their lithospheric boundaries within the Trans-European Suture Zone (TESZ): a review

TL;DR: The Trans-European Suture Zone (TESZ) is a broad and complex zone of terrane accretion separating ancient lithosphere of the Baltic Shield and East European Craton (EEC) from the younger lithosphere as discussed by the authors.
Journal ArticleDOI

Sinistral transpression and the Silurian closure of Iapetus

TL;DR: In this article, structural and stratigraphic evidence from Britain, Scandinavia, East Greenland and Newfoundland is reviewed and shows that Western Avalonia, Eastern Avalonia and Baltica all docked sinistrally against Laurentia in the Silurian.
Journal ArticleDOI

Changing Silurian-Devonian relative plate motion in the Caledonides: sinistral transpression to sinistral transtension

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined the diachronous closure of Iapetus, the contrasting tectonic modes arising from that closure, and the nature and origin of subsequent Devonian deformation in the context of progressively changing, sinistrally dominated relative plate motion between Laurentia and Avalonia-Baltica.
Journal ArticleDOI

Recent developments in Carboniferous geology: a critical review with implications for the British Isles and N.W. Europe

TL;DR: In this paper, it was suggested that the late Dinantian and Silesian sedimentary cycles are probably of glacio-eustatic origins, but there seems little evidence that supposed Dinantians and Namurian mesothemic cycles have such an origin, there are, in fact, increasing doubts as to the actual existence of these particular cycles.
Journal ArticleDOI

Information from folds: A review

TL;DR: Folds are spectacular geological structures that are seen in layered rock on many different scales as mentioned in this paper, and there is a rich body of work in the field of structural geology, from classical approaches to current developments.
References
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Did the Atlantic Close and then Re-Open?

J. Tuzo Wilson
- 13 Aug 1966 - 
Journal ArticleDOI

Tectonic transpression in Caledonian Spitsbergen

W. B. Harland
- 01 Jan 1971 - 
TL;DR: In addition to the well-established extension, compression and transcurrent relative movements between plates of the lithosphere, the authors considers intermediate or oblique relative movements, namely, transtension and transpression.
Journal ArticleDOI

Evolution of the Appalachian/Caledonian Orogen

TL;DR: In this paper, the structure of the Appalachian/Caledonian orogen is described and a new model for its evolution is proposed, which is based on the model proposed in this paper.
Journal ArticleDOI

Faunal evidence for oceanic separations in the Palaeozoic of Britain

TL;DR: In the early Ordovician, S British faunas are comparable with those from Bohemia, France and elsewhere to the S, indicating connection with Gondwanaland, and these differences from those in the Baltic area, a distribution which we attribute to a true ocean, Tornquist9s Sea, between N and S Europe as discussed by the authors.
Related Papers (5)