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Silurian provenance variation in the Southern Uplands terrane, Scotland, assessed using neodymium isotopes and linked with regional tectonic evolution

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  03 November 2011

P. Stone
Affiliation:
P. Stone, British Geological Survey, Murchison House, West Mains Road, Edinburgh EH9 3LA,Scotland, U.K. e-mail: psto@bgs.ac.uk
J. A. Evans
Affiliation:
J. A. Evans, Nerc Isotope Geosciences Laboratory, Keyworth, Nottingham NG12 5GG, England, U.K.

Abstract

ABSTRACT

The progressive changes in the provenance of Silurian greywacke turbidites in the Southern Uplands terrane reflect geotectonic events at the Laurentian continental margin during closure of the Iapetus Ocean. In the northern Gala Group, juvenile andesitic detritus in some beds gives εNd values no lower than −4·2; more commonly, quartzo-feldspathic greywackes have εNd values in the −5·5 to −6·7 range, produced by the mixing of juvenile plutonic and Proterozoic basement detritus during arc unroofing. In the southern (younger) Gala Group, Proterozoic εNd values range down from −7·7 to −11·2 with only sporadic evidence for a juvenile component. An abrupt change is seen between the Gala Group and its tectonostratigraphical successor, the Hawick Group. In the latter, εNd values have a compact range between −4·7 and −6·6, indicating the renewed dominance of a more juvenile, plutonic provenance. Regional variations in the Sr/Rb ratio suggest that this was more evolved than the source of the Gala Group plutonic material. The Wenlock greywackes of the Riccarton Group have εNd values in the range −5·1 to −7·8, overlapping with the Hawick Group and with coeval greywackes from both the Midland Valley and Lakesman terranes. Overall, the data support proposals that the Iapetus Ocean had effectively closed by mid-Silurian times. Conversely, data from greywacke boulders in the basal Old Red Sandstone conglomerate of the Midland Valley terrane militate against its Wenlock juxtaposition with the Southern Uplands.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Royal Society of Edinburgh 2000

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