Central Highlands (Grampian) Terrane - metamorphic basement, Northern Ireland
Mitchell, W I (ed.). 2004. The geology of Northern Ireland-our natural foundation. Geological Survey of Northern Ireland, Belfast. |
M R Cooper and T P Johnston
Introduction
The Mesoproterozoic and Neoproterozoic metamorphic basement in Northern Ireland consists of deformed and metamorphosed sedimentary and volcanic rocks. Their distribution here is viewed as a continuation of similar lithologies and stratigraphical sequences in Scotland and northwest Ireland [1]. In Scotland the southern boundary of this terrane is the Highland Boundary Fault. In Northern Ireland geophysical evidence indicates that the Fair Head-Clew Bay Line (Chapter 1) and (Chapter 19) is the southwesterly continuation of that fault although basement rocks do occur south of that line in the Central Inlier of Co. Tyrone[2]. The rocks are divided into a Pre-Dalradian Basement and the Dalradian Supergroup.
Deformation of the Dalradian Regional metamorphism
References
- ↑ Hutton, D H W. 1987. Strike-slip terranes and a model for the evolution of the British and Irish Caledonides. Geological Magazine. 125, 405–25.
- ↑ Bluck, B J, Gibbons, W, and Ingham, J K. 1992. Terranes. In: Cope, J C W, Ingham, J K, and Rawson, P F (eds.). Atlas of Palaeogeography and Lithofacies. Geological Society of London, Memoirs, 13, 1–4.