Crenulation-slip development in a Caledonian shear zone in NW Ireland: Evidence for a multi-stage movement history
In Scotland and Ireland, a Laurentian passive margin sequence, the Dalradian Supergroup, was deformed during the c. 470-460 Ma Grampian orogeny, resulting in the formation of crustal-scale recumbent nappes. In Ireland, this passive margin sequence is in general bounded to the SE by the Fair Head-Clew Bay Line (FHCBL), a segment of a major lineament within the Caledonides. Adjacent to the FHCBL, Dalradian metasediments in two separate inliers have undergone post-Grampian strike-slip movement, with the initially flat-lying Grampian nappe fabric acting as a décollement-like slip surface in both cases. As the orientation of these foliation slip surfaces was oblique to the local shear plane in both inliers, displacement along these pre-existing foliation surfaces was also accompanied by crenulation slip. However, the crenulation-slip morphologies produced imply the opposite sense of movement in the two inliers. 40Ar-39Ar dating of muscovite defining the crenulation-slip surfaces indicates that post-Grampian dextral displacement took place along the FHCBL at 448 ± 3 Ma. A subsequent phase of sinistral movement along the FHCBL took place at c. 400 Ma, based on previously published Rb-Sr muscovite ages for synkinematic pegmatites. The kinematic information obtained from crenulation-slip morphologies combined with geochronology can thus be used to constrain the reactivation history of a major crustal-scale shear zone.
Publication Details
Type
Journal ArticleTitle
Crenulation-slip development in a Caledonian shear zone in NW Ireland: Evidence for a multi-stage movement historyYear
2004Author(s)
Chew, D.M., Daly, J.S., Flowerdew, M.J., Kennedy, M.J. and Page, L.M.Journal
Geological Society, London, Special PublicationsVolume
224Page(s)
337-352URL
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