Shearing on the Great Glen Fault: Kinematic and Microstructural Evidence Preserved at Different Crustal Levels

The NE-SW trending Great Glen Fault (GGF) is one of mainland Scotland's most significant crustal-scale faults, although our understanding of its early kinematics is in question. Previous studies generally agree that the GGF was initiated as a Silurian sinistral strike-slip fault displacing c. 4...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Becker, Cassandra
Other Authors: Geosciences, Law, Richard D., Caddick, Mark J., Spotila, James A.
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Virginia Tech 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/115144
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record_format openpolar
spelling ftvirginiatec:oai:vtechworks.lib.vt.edu:10919/115144 2024-04-28T08:17:29+00:00 Shearing on the Great Glen Fault: Kinematic and Microstructural Evidence Preserved at Different Crustal Levels Becker, Cassandra Geosciences Law, Richard D. Caddick, Mark J. Spotila, James A. Scotland 2023-05-22 ETD application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/10919/115144 en eng Virginia Tech vt_gsexam:37437 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/115144 Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Dynamic Recrystallization Kinematics Shearing Faulting Scotland Quartz Thesis 2023 ftvirginiatec 2024-04-03T17:08:29Z The NE-SW trending Great Glen Fault (GGF) is one of mainland Scotland's most significant crustal-scale faults, although our understanding of its early kinematics is in question. Previous studies generally agree that the GGF was initiated as a Silurian sinistral strike-slip fault displacing c. 425 Ma isotopically dated granitic plutons. Stewart et al. (2001) argued that dikes fed by these plutons were sinistrally sheared by the GGF while in the sub-magmatic state, suggesting continuous strike-slip motion on the GGF by 425 Ma. Strike-slip offset post-dating overlying Devonian sedimentary basins is likely only a few tens of kilometers, requiring substantial (100s of kms) Silurian-aged strike-slip movement on the GGF in most plate reconstruction models for the Caledonian mountain belt, now exposed in East Greenland, Scandinavia, and Scotland. In contrast, a recent study (Searle 2021) has argued that motion on the GGF may instead have initiated in the Upper Paleozoic and that off-set is therefore minimal, bringing current restoration models into question. Several papers report widespread field and microstructural evidence from crystalline bedrock and overlying Devonian sedimentary rocks for brittle upper-crustal shearing on the GGF. However, evidence for high-temperature crystal plastic shearing at deeper crustal levels on the GGF, potentially of Silurian to Early Devonian age, is limited. During summer 2022, suites of oriented and plastically deformed metasedimentary rock samples were collected from the NW side (Moine/Lewisian gneisses and quartzites), center (Moine quartzites), and SE side (Dalradian quartzites) of the GGF. Additional samples included plutonic rocks from locations adjacent to the GGF and the associated Strathconnon fault that were believed to have been intruded during strike-slip motion, but after regional metamorphism and deformation in the surrounding Moine rocks. Microstructures and quartz c-axis fabrics from samples on the NW side and in the center of the GGF indicate a NW side up to the SW ... Thesis East Greenland Greenland VTechWorks (VirginiaTech)
institution Open Polar
collection VTechWorks (VirginiaTech)
op_collection_id ftvirginiatec
language English
topic Dynamic Recrystallization
Kinematics
Shearing
Faulting
Scotland
Quartz
spellingShingle Dynamic Recrystallization
Kinematics
Shearing
Faulting
Scotland
Quartz
Becker, Cassandra
Shearing on the Great Glen Fault: Kinematic and Microstructural Evidence Preserved at Different Crustal Levels
topic_facet Dynamic Recrystallization
Kinematics
Shearing
Faulting
Scotland
Quartz
description The NE-SW trending Great Glen Fault (GGF) is one of mainland Scotland's most significant crustal-scale faults, although our understanding of its early kinematics is in question. Previous studies generally agree that the GGF was initiated as a Silurian sinistral strike-slip fault displacing c. 425 Ma isotopically dated granitic plutons. Stewart et al. (2001) argued that dikes fed by these plutons were sinistrally sheared by the GGF while in the sub-magmatic state, suggesting continuous strike-slip motion on the GGF by 425 Ma. Strike-slip offset post-dating overlying Devonian sedimentary basins is likely only a few tens of kilometers, requiring substantial (100s of kms) Silurian-aged strike-slip movement on the GGF in most plate reconstruction models for the Caledonian mountain belt, now exposed in East Greenland, Scandinavia, and Scotland. In contrast, a recent study (Searle 2021) has argued that motion on the GGF may instead have initiated in the Upper Paleozoic and that off-set is therefore minimal, bringing current restoration models into question. Several papers report widespread field and microstructural evidence from crystalline bedrock and overlying Devonian sedimentary rocks for brittle upper-crustal shearing on the GGF. However, evidence for high-temperature crystal plastic shearing at deeper crustal levels on the GGF, potentially of Silurian to Early Devonian age, is limited. During summer 2022, suites of oriented and plastically deformed metasedimentary rock samples were collected from the NW side (Moine/Lewisian gneisses and quartzites), center (Moine quartzites), and SE side (Dalradian quartzites) of the GGF. Additional samples included plutonic rocks from locations adjacent to the GGF and the associated Strathconnon fault that were believed to have been intruded during strike-slip motion, but after regional metamorphism and deformation in the surrounding Moine rocks. Microstructures and quartz c-axis fabrics from samples on the NW side and in the center of the GGF indicate a NW side up to the SW ...
author2 Geosciences
Law, Richard D.
Caddick, Mark J.
Spotila, James A.
format Thesis
author Becker, Cassandra
author_facet Becker, Cassandra
author_sort Becker, Cassandra
title Shearing on the Great Glen Fault: Kinematic and Microstructural Evidence Preserved at Different Crustal Levels
title_short Shearing on the Great Glen Fault: Kinematic and Microstructural Evidence Preserved at Different Crustal Levels
title_full Shearing on the Great Glen Fault: Kinematic and Microstructural Evidence Preserved at Different Crustal Levels
title_fullStr Shearing on the Great Glen Fault: Kinematic and Microstructural Evidence Preserved at Different Crustal Levels
title_full_unstemmed Shearing on the Great Glen Fault: Kinematic and Microstructural Evidence Preserved at Different Crustal Levels
title_sort shearing on the great glen fault: kinematic and microstructural evidence preserved at different crustal levels
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2023
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/115144
op_coverage Scotland
genre East Greenland
Greenland
genre_facet East Greenland
Greenland
op_relation vt_gsexam:37437
http://hdl.handle.net/10919/115144
op_rights Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
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