Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-j824f Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-14T22:08:48.777Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The Silurian volcanic rocks of the Mendip Hills, Somerset; and the Tortworth area, Gloucestershire, England

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 May 2009

P. C. van De Kamp
Affiliation:
Shell Development Co., P.O. Box 481, Houston, Texas, 77001.

Summary

Field, petrographic and chemical studies on the Silurian volcanic rocks of the Mendip Hills show that there are probably 15 or more rock units in the series including andesite and rhyodacite lavas, rhyodacite tuffs, agglomerates, and a dolerite dyke. The predominant rock type is rhyodacite which may be as much as 80 percent of the volcanics. Volcanics of Silurian age from the Tortworth area, Gloucestershire, are of latite-andesite composition.

The Mendip rocks have been deuterically altered. Calcite-quartz-laumontite veins are common in fractures in these rocks. The agglomerates are particularly susceptible to weathering and some bombs are extensively altered to clays. Twelve rocks were chemically analysed for 36 elements each. No anomalous base metal concentrations were found in the volcanics although Pb, Zn, and Cu mineralisation is known in the area. K/Rb varies from 202 to 909 in these calc-alkaline rocks.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1969

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

REFERENCES

Bence, A. E. 1966. The Differentiation History of the Earth by Rb-Sr Isotopic Relationships. Massachusetts Inst. Tech. Publ. 1381–14, 14th Ann. Prog. Rept. for 1966, Dept. Geol. Geophys., 35–78.Google Scholar
Coombs, D. S., Ellis, A. J., Fyfe, W. S., & Taylor, A. M. 1959. The Zeolite Facics, with Comments on the Interpretation of Hydrothermal Syntheses. Geochim. Cosmochim. Acta, 17, 53107.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Curtis, M. L. K. 1955. A Review of Past Research on the Lower Palaeozoic Rocks of the Tortworth and Eastern Mendip Inliers, Proc. Bristol Nat. Soc., 29, 7178.Google Scholar
Faure, G., & Hurley, P. M. 1963. The Isotopic Composition of Strontium in Oceanic and Continental Basalts: Application to the Origin of Igneous Rocks. J. Petrology, 4, 3150.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fawcett, J. J. 1965. Alteration Products of Olivine and Pyroxene in Basalt Lavas from the Isle of Mull. Mineralog. Mag., 35, 5568.Google Scholar
Geikie, A., & Strahan, A. 1899. Volcanic Group in the Carboniferous Limestone of North Somerset. Summ. Progr. geol Surv. for 1898, 110111.Google Scholar
Green, G. W. 1965. Silurian, Chapter II in: Geoloev of the Country Around Wells and Cheddar. Mem. geol Surv. U.K., 280, 79.Google Scholar
Leake, B. E., Hendry, G. L., Kemp, A., Plant, A. G., Harvey, P. K., Wilson, J.R., Coats, J.S., Aucott, J. W., Lunel, T., & Howarth, R. 1969. The Chemical Analysis of Rock Powders by Automatic X-Ray Fluorescence. Chem. Geol., 5, 786.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Moore, C. 1867. Abnormal Conditions of Secondary Deposits when Connected with Somerset and South Wales Coal Basins, Q. Jlgeol Soc. Lond., 23, 207233.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Morgan, C. L., & Reynolds, S. H. 1901. The Igneous Rocks and Associated Sedimentary Beds of the Tortworth Inlier, Q. Jl geol Soc. Lond., 57, 267284.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nockolds, S. R. 1954. Average Chemical Compositions of Some Igneous Rocks, Bull geol Soc. Am., 65, 10071032.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pettijohn, F. J. 1957. Sedimentary Rocks, 2nd Ed. Harper, New York, 718 p.Google Scholar
Reynolds, S. H. 1907. A Silurian Inlier in the Eastern Mendips, Q. Jl geol Soc.Lond., 63, 217238.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Reynolds, S. H. 1909. The Pre-Devoriian Rocks of the Mendips and the Bristol Area, Rept Brit. Ass. for 1908, 381386.Google Scholar
Reynolds, S. H. 1912. Further Work onthe Silurian Rocks of the Eastern Mendips, Proc. Bristol Nat. Soc., 4, 7682.Google Scholar
Reynolds, S. H. 1924. The Igneous Rocks of the Tortworth Inlier, Q. Jl geol Soc. Lond., 80, 106111.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Shaw, D. M. 1968. A Review of K-Rb Fractionation Trends by Covariance Analysis, Geochim. Cosmochim. Acta, 32, 573601.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Taylor, S. R. 1965. The Application of Trace Element Data to Problems in Petrology, Phys. Chem. Earth, 6, 133213.CrossRefGoogle Scholar