Magma Ascent along a Major Terrane Boundary: Crustal Contamination and Magma Mixing at the Drumadoon Intrusive Complex, Isle of Arran, Scotland

The composite intrusions of Drumadoon and An Cumhann crop out on the SE coast of the Isle of Arran, Scotland and form part of the larger British and Irish Palaeogene Igneous Province, a subset of the North Atlantic Igneous Province. The intrusions (shallow-level dykes and sills) comprise a central q...

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Main Authors: Meade, F. C., Chew, D. M., Troll, V. R., Ellam, R. M., Page, L. M.
Language:English
Published: 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:http://doc.rero.ch/record/289902/files/egp081.pdf
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spelling ftreroch:oai:doc.rero.ch:289902 2023-05-15T17:34:17+02:00 Magma Ascent along a Major Terrane Boundary: Crustal Contamination and Magma Mixing at the Drumadoon Intrusive Complex, Isle of Arran, Scotland Meade, F. C. Chew, D. M. Troll, V. R. Ellam, R. M. Page, L. M. 2017-08-02T19:32:13Z http://doc.rero.ch/record/289902/files/egp081.pdf eng eng http://doc.rero.ch/record/289902/files/egp081.pdf 2017 ftreroch 2023-02-16T17:27:35Z The composite intrusions of Drumadoon and An Cumhann crop out on the SE coast of the Isle of Arran, Scotland and form part of the larger British and Irish Palaeogene Igneous Province, a subset of the North Atlantic Igneous Province. The intrusions (shallow-level dykes and sills) comprise a central quartz-feldspar-phyric rhyolite flanked by xenocryst-bearing basaltic andesite, with an intermediate zone of dark quartz-feldspar-phyric dacite. New geochemical data provide information on the evolution of the component magmas and their relationships with each other, as well as their interaction with the crust through which they travelled. During shallow-crustal emplacement, the end-member magmas mixed. Isotopic evidence shows that both magmas were contaminated by the crust prior to mixing; the basaltic andesite magma preserves some evidence of contamination within the lower crust, whereas the rhyolite mainly records upper-crustal contamination. The Highland Boundary Fault divides Arran into two distinct terranes, the Neoproterozoic to Early Palaeozoic Grampian Terrane to the north and the Palaeozoic Midland Valley Terrane to the south. The Drumadoon Complex lies within the Midland Valley Terrane but its isotopic signatures indicate almost exclusive involvement of Grampian Terrane crust. Therefore, although the magmas originated at depth on the northern side of the Highland Boundary Fault, they have crossed this boundary during their evolution, probably just prior to emplacement Other/Unknown Material North Atlantic RERO DOC Digital Library Midland ENVELOPE(8.224,8.224,63.072,63.072)
institution Open Polar
collection RERO DOC Digital Library
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language English
description The composite intrusions of Drumadoon and An Cumhann crop out on the SE coast of the Isle of Arran, Scotland and form part of the larger British and Irish Palaeogene Igneous Province, a subset of the North Atlantic Igneous Province. The intrusions (shallow-level dykes and sills) comprise a central quartz-feldspar-phyric rhyolite flanked by xenocryst-bearing basaltic andesite, with an intermediate zone of dark quartz-feldspar-phyric dacite. New geochemical data provide information on the evolution of the component magmas and their relationships with each other, as well as their interaction with the crust through which they travelled. During shallow-crustal emplacement, the end-member magmas mixed. Isotopic evidence shows that both magmas were contaminated by the crust prior to mixing; the basaltic andesite magma preserves some evidence of contamination within the lower crust, whereas the rhyolite mainly records upper-crustal contamination. The Highland Boundary Fault divides Arran into two distinct terranes, the Neoproterozoic to Early Palaeozoic Grampian Terrane to the north and the Palaeozoic Midland Valley Terrane to the south. The Drumadoon Complex lies within the Midland Valley Terrane but its isotopic signatures indicate almost exclusive involvement of Grampian Terrane crust. Therefore, although the magmas originated at depth on the northern side of the Highland Boundary Fault, they have crossed this boundary during their evolution, probably just prior to emplacement
author Meade, F. C.
Chew, D. M.
Troll, V. R.
Ellam, R. M.
Page, L. M.
spellingShingle Meade, F. C.
Chew, D. M.
Troll, V. R.
Ellam, R. M.
Page, L. M.
Magma Ascent along a Major Terrane Boundary: Crustal Contamination and Magma Mixing at the Drumadoon Intrusive Complex, Isle of Arran, Scotland
author_facet Meade, F. C.
Chew, D. M.
Troll, V. R.
Ellam, R. M.
Page, L. M.
author_sort Meade, F. C.
title Magma Ascent along a Major Terrane Boundary: Crustal Contamination and Magma Mixing at the Drumadoon Intrusive Complex, Isle of Arran, Scotland
title_short Magma Ascent along a Major Terrane Boundary: Crustal Contamination and Magma Mixing at the Drumadoon Intrusive Complex, Isle of Arran, Scotland
title_full Magma Ascent along a Major Terrane Boundary: Crustal Contamination and Magma Mixing at the Drumadoon Intrusive Complex, Isle of Arran, Scotland
title_fullStr Magma Ascent along a Major Terrane Boundary: Crustal Contamination and Magma Mixing at the Drumadoon Intrusive Complex, Isle of Arran, Scotland
title_full_unstemmed Magma Ascent along a Major Terrane Boundary: Crustal Contamination and Magma Mixing at the Drumadoon Intrusive Complex, Isle of Arran, Scotland
title_sort magma ascent along a major terrane boundary: crustal contamination and magma mixing at the drumadoon intrusive complex, isle of arran, scotland
publishDate 2017
url http://doc.rero.ch/record/289902/files/egp081.pdf
long_lat ENVELOPE(8.224,8.224,63.072,63.072)
geographic Midland
geographic_facet Midland
genre North Atlantic
genre_facet North Atlantic
op_relation http://doc.rero.ch/record/289902/files/egp081.pdf
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