Palaeomagnetic evidence for the age of the Cumbrian and Manx hematite ore deposits: implications for the origin of hematite mineralization at the margins of the East Irish Sea Basin, UK

Examples of epigenetic hematite mineralization located at the margins of the East Irish Sea Basin have been sampled for palaeomagnetic investigation to establish the timing of ore formation. Samples collected from 10 sites in Cumbria are dominated by hematite of near-pure composition and characteriz...

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Main Authors: Stephen F. Crowley, John D. A. Piper, Turki Bamarouf, Andrew P. Roberts
Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: 2016
Subjects:
UK
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.3453557.v1
https://figshare.com/articles/Palaeomagnetic_evidence_for_the_age_of_the_Cumbrian_and_Manx_hematite_ore_deposits_implications_for_the_origin_of_hematite___mineralization_at_the_margins_of_the_East_Irish_Sea_Basin_UK/3453557
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spelling ftgeosoclonfig:oai:figshare.com:article/3453557 2023-05-15T17:35:07+02:00 Palaeomagnetic evidence for the age of the Cumbrian and Manx hematite ore deposits: implications for the origin of hematite mineralization at the margins of the East Irish Sea Basin, UK Stephen F. Crowley John D. A. Piper Turki Bamarouf Andrew P. Roberts 2016-06-21T11:30:38Z https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.3453557.v1 https://figshare.com/articles/Palaeomagnetic_evidence_for_the_age_of_the_Cumbrian_and_Manx_hematite_ore_deposits_implications_for_the_origin_of_hematite___mineralization_at_the_margins_of_the_East_Irish_Sea_Basin_UK/3453557 unknown doi:10.6084/m9.figshare.3453557.v1 https://figshare.com/articles/Palaeomagnetic_evidence_for_the_age_of_the_Cumbrian_and_Manx_hematite_ore_deposits_implications_for_the_origin_of_hematite___mineralization_at_the_margins_of_the_East_Irish_Sea_Basin_UK/3453557 CC BY 4.0 CC-BY Geology Manx hematite mineralization UK extensional geotectonic regime hematite mineralization hematite mineralization sited Sea Basin Manx hematite ore deposits Dataset 2016 ftgeosoclonfig https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.3453557.v1 2020-02-21T07:24:09Z Examples of epigenetic hematite mineralization located at the margins of the East Irish Sea Basin have been sampled for palaeomagnetic investigation to establish the timing of ore formation. Samples collected from 10 sites in Cumbria are dominated by hematite of near-pure composition and characterized by dual polarity and, in part, dual component magnetizations that yield palaeopoles (nine sites) between 50°N, 130°E and 50°N, 150°E. In contrast, samples recovered from seven sites on the Isle of Man have more varied mineralogical compositions that include ferromagnets with lower unblocking temperatures. Manx hematite mineralization also exhibits dual polarity, but magnetizations yield steeper inclinations with palaeopoles lying between 55°N, 130°E and 70°N, 150°E. Steeper directions probably reflect minor tilting of the Manx block following hematite emplacement. Correlation of poles with the European apparent polar wander path indicates that these ore deposits formed during the Middle Triassic. Results show that hematite mineralization sited at the margins of the East Irish Sea Basin is essentially contemporaneous and establishes, for the first time, an underlying temporal relationship between these geographically dispersed ore bodies. Dating places the mineralization within a broader extensional geotectonic regime associated with the early rifting of Pangaea in the North Atlantic. The context implies a causal link between crustal extension, development of ore-forming fluids within the evolving East Irish Sea Basin, and subsequent migration of fluids to basin margins where iron was precipitated as hematite. Dataset North Atlantic Geological Society of London: Figshare Tilting ENVELOPE(-54.065,-54.065,49.700,49.700)
institution Open Polar
collection Geological Society of London: Figshare
op_collection_id ftgeosoclonfig
language unknown
topic Geology
Manx hematite mineralization
UK
extensional geotectonic regime
hematite mineralization
hematite mineralization sited
Sea Basin
Manx hematite ore deposits
spellingShingle Geology
Manx hematite mineralization
UK
extensional geotectonic regime
hematite mineralization
hematite mineralization sited
Sea Basin
Manx hematite ore deposits
Stephen F. Crowley
John D. A. Piper
Turki Bamarouf
Andrew P. Roberts
Palaeomagnetic evidence for the age of the Cumbrian and Manx hematite ore deposits: implications for the origin of hematite mineralization at the margins of the East Irish Sea Basin, UK
topic_facet Geology
Manx hematite mineralization
UK
extensional geotectonic regime
hematite mineralization
hematite mineralization sited
Sea Basin
Manx hematite ore deposits
description Examples of epigenetic hematite mineralization located at the margins of the East Irish Sea Basin have been sampled for palaeomagnetic investigation to establish the timing of ore formation. Samples collected from 10 sites in Cumbria are dominated by hematite of near-pure composition and characterized by dual polarity and, in part, dual component magnetizations that yield palaeopoles (nine sites) between 50°N, 130°E and 50°N, 150°E. In contrast, samples recovered from seven sites on the Isle of Man have more varied mineralogical compositions that include ferromagnets with lower unblocking temperatures. Manx hematite mineralization also exhibits dual polarity, but magnetizations yield steeper inclinations with palaeopoles lying between 55°N, 130°E and 70°N, 150°E. Steeper directions probably reflect minor tilting of the Manx block following hematite emplacement. Correlation of poles with the European apparent polar wander path indicates that these ore deposits formed during the Middle Triassic. Results show that hematite mineralization sited at the margins of the East Irish Sea Basin is essentially contemporaneous and establishes, for the first time, an underlying temporal relationship between these geographically dispersed ore bodies. Dating places the mineralization within a broader extensional geotectonic regime associated with the early rifting of Pangaea in the North Atlantic. The context implies a causal link between crustal extension, development of ore-forming fluids within the evolving East Irish Sea Basin, and subsequent migration of fluids to basin margins where iron was precipitated as hematite.
format Dataset
author Stephen F. Crowley
John D. A. Piper
Turki Bamarouf
Andrew P. Roberts
author_facet Stephen F. Crowley
John D. A. Piper
Turki Bamarouf
Andrew P. Roberts
author_sort Stephen F. Crowley
title Palaeomagnetic evidence for the age of the Cumbrian and Manx hematite ore deposits: implications for the origin of hematite mineralization at the margins of the East Irish Sea Basin, UK
title_short Palaeomagnetic evidence for the age of the Cumbrian and Manx hematite ore deposits: implications for the origin of hematite mineralization at the margins of the East Irish Sea Basin, UK
title_full Palaeomagnetic evidence for the age of the Cumbrian and Manx hematite ore deposits: implications for the origin of hematite mineralization at the margins of the East Irish Sea Basin, UK
title_fullStr Palaeomagnetic evidence for the age of the Cumbrian and Manx hematite ore deposits: implications for the origin of hematite mineralization at the margins of the East Irish Sea Basin, UK
title_full_unstemmed Palaeomagnetic evidence for the age of the Cumbrian and Manx hematite ore deposits: implications for the origin of hematite mineralization at the margins of the East Irish Sea Basin, UK
title_sort palaeomagnetic evidence for the age of the cumbrian and manx hematite ore deposits: implications for the origin of hematite mineralization at the margins of the east irish sea basin, uk
publishDate 2016
url https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.3453557.v1
https://figshare.com/articles/Palaeomagnetic_evidence_for_the_age_of_the_Cumbrian_and_Manx_hematite_ore_deposits_implications_for_the_origin_of_hematite___mineralization_at_the_margins_of_the_East_Irish_Sea_Basin_UK/3453557
long_lat ENVELOPE(-54.065,-54.065,49.700,49.700)
geographic Tilting
geographic_facet Tilting
genre North Atlantic
genre_facet North Atlantic
op_relation doi:10.6084/m9.figshare.3453557.v1
https://figshare.com/articles/Palaeomagnetic_evidence_for_the_age_of_the_Cumbrian_and_Manx_hematite_ore_deposits_implications_for_the_origin_of_hematite___mineralization_at_the_margins_of_the_East_Irish_Sea_Basin_UK/3453557
op_rights CC BY 4.0
op_rightsnorm CC-BY
op_doi https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.3453557.v1
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