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Digital Mapping and Three-Dimensional Model Building of the Ben Nevis Igneous Complex, Southwest Highlands, Scotland: New Insights into the Emplacement and Preservation of Postorogenic Magmatism.

Authors :
Muir, R. J.
Vaughan, A. P. M.
Source :
Journal of Geology; Nov2017, Vol. 125 Issue 6, p607-636, 30p, 10 Color Photographs, 2 Black and White Photographs, 1 Graph
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

Caledonian postorogenic magmatic processes are not well understood. New digital mapping and three-dimensional modeling of the end-Caledonian (late Silurian to Early Devonian) Ben Nevis Igneous Complex in the SW Highlands of Scotland provide quantitative estimates ofmagmatic rock volumes for the first time and argue against local sources for the volcanic rocks or caldera interpretations for structural evolution. Reexamination of the Ben Nevis Intrusive Ring Tuff, key evidence for caldera collapse, shows it to be a restricted marginal facies of the trondhjemitic InnerGranite, and there is no evidence for a ring fault, previously argued as evidence for cauldron subsidence. The volcanic rocks at the core of the complex appear to form a 1.3-km<superscript>3</superscript> roof pendant in the Inner Granite, and paleoflow evidence suggests that they had a distal volcanic source to the NW. Compositional comparisons between the InnerGranite and themonzonitic Outer Granite indicate that they are unlikely to have had a common petrogenesis or be coeval. The plutonic rocks form a concentric, composite, 6.4 × 8.5-km tabular body, elliptical in plan, with a total volume in the range 44-105 km<superscript>3</superscript>. Large areas of late Precambrian Dalradian Supergroup metasedimentary country rocks form parts of a steeply dipping carapace and roof pendants at the edge of the complex. Comparisonwith calc-alkaline volcanic rocks and plutons of the comparable Cenozoic San Juan Volcanic Complex in Colorado suggests that the plutonic rocks may have grown as laccoliths during regional caldera volcanism. Structural data suggest that the laccoliths inflated toward the SE, fed by NE-SWdikes in the core of the tightly folded Appin Syncline. This reevaluation of a classic area of world geology sheds light on a lost volcanic landscape that once covered much of the SW Highlands of Scotland. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00221376
Volume :
125
Issue :
6
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Journal of Geology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
125671110
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1086/693858