Tectonophysics | 2019

Structure of the Northern Moine thrust zone, Loch Eriboll, Scottish Caledonides

 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


Abstract This paper reviews the geology of the Late Ordovician - Silurian Caledonian Moine Thrust zone in the Loch Eriboll region, NW Scotland. We present new detailed mapping and balanced/restored cross-sections to examine its structural evolution. This thrust zone comprises four major thrust slices, carried by the Moine, Lochan Riabhach, Arnaboll and Sole thrusts. Ductile mylonites were derived from lithologies in both the hangingwall (Moine schists) and the footwall (Lewisian basement gneisses, Cambrian quartzites, Ordovician dolomites) of the Moine Thrust. The mylonites are bounded by the Lochan Riabhach thrust below and the Moine thrust above. The Arnaboll thrust sheet comprises Lewisian basement gneisses and Cambrian-Ordovician sedimentary rocks over the Sole Thrust sheet, which exposes a spectacular imbricate sequence of Cambrian-Ordovician sedimentary rocks. Although thrusts sequentially propagated in-sequence from higher (Moine) to lower (Sole) thrusts with time, there is evidence for minor out-of-sequence thrusting and breakback thrusting. Thrusts evolve from deep ductile shears where strain is concentrated along mylonite zones up into the brittle field where they become discrete planar thrust faults. The Early Silurian Scandian metamorphism (~435–415\u202fMa) is related to a Himalayan style structure with SSE-directed subduction and WNW directed extrusion of a migmatitic core, which we liken to channel flow. We suggest that two major crustal-scale thrusts that extend down into the upper mantle imaged on seismic profiles across the foreland, the Outer Isles and Flannan thrusts, are unrelated spatially or temporally to the Moine thrust sequence.

Volume 752
Pages 35-51
DOI 10.1016/J.TECTO.2018.12.016
Language English
Journal Tectonophysics

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