The basement geology of the Porcupine High - a key transatlantic link between the Caledonides and Appalachians

APPROVED In order to better reconstruct the basement geology of the western Irish offshore and the North Atlantic, constraining the geologic evolution of the Porcupine High region is key. Located 200 km west of Ireland, the Porcupine High is a NNE-trending bathymetric high, and is surrounded by seve...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Dennehy, Shannon Raftery
Other Authors: Chew, David
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Trinity College Dublin. School of Natural Sciences. Discipline of Geology 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2262/103694
https://tcdlocalportal.tcd.ie/pls/EnterApex/f?p=800:71:0::::P71_USERNAME:DENNEHSH
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Summary:APPROVED In order to better reconstruct the basement geology of the western Irish offshore and the North Atlantic, constraining the geologic evolution of the Porcupine High region is key. Located 200 km west of Ireland, the Porcupine High is a NNE-trending bathymetric high, and is surrounded by several basins that have been the site of petroleum exploration since the 1970s. In this paper, we present geochronological data from sampling campaigns, including dredge samples and shallow drill cores, over the last twenty years. All samples were recovered north of the inferred trace of the Iapetus suture. Most dredge samples are likely near in situ. A core of foliated gneiss yields U-Pb zircon ages of c. 500-478 Ma. A 385 Ma apatite U-Pb age records post-Caledonian exhumation; K-feldspar Pb isotope data imply a Caledonian affinity. These rocks are assigned to the ophiolitic rocks of the Clew Bay Complex and were sampled adjacent to a E-W trending magnetic boundary across the Porcupine High that we correlate with the Fair Head - Clew Bay line. North of this sampling site, in a region with a magnetic anomaly low, dredging recovered >90% lower greenschist-facies psammite cobbles. U-Pb detrital zircon data imply an affinity with the Moine or Grampian Group and U-Pb apatite ages (900 - 1800 Ma) are unaffected by Caledonian orogenesis. Drilled granitic orthogneiss collected farther north yields a 1314 Ma U-Pb zircon crystallization age. Granulite-facies metamorphism (12 kbar, 740°C) is of likely Grenville age and is supported by an apatite U-Pb cooling age of 875 Ma. Zircon Hf isotopic and Pb-Kfsp data point to an affinity with the Rockall Bank Palaeoproterozoic, delimiting the offshore extent of the Annagh Gneiss Complex (AGC) of NW Ireland. Dredge samples collected at the northernmost site yield >98% metamorphic clasts. U-Pb detrital zircon ages from two low-grade metasediments imply a Moine/Grampian Group and an Upper Dalradian affinity respectively; Caledonian apatite U-Pb ages are prevalent. The high-grade ...