Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-cjp7w Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-07-03T09:14:44.789Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Petrogenesis of the St David's Head Layered Intrusion, Wales: a complex history of multiple magma injection and in situ crystallisation

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  03 November 2011

R. E. Bevins
Affiliation:
Department of Geology, National Museum of Wales, Cardiff CF1 3NP, U.K.
G. J. Lees
Affiliation:
Department of Geology, University of Keele, Staffs. ST5 5BG, U.K.
R. A. Roach
Affiliation:
Department of Geology, University of Keele, Staffs. ST5 5BG, U.K.
G. Rowbotham
Affiliation:
Department of Geology, University of Keele, Staffs. ST5 5BG, U.K.
P. A. Floyd
Affiliation:
Department of Geology, University of Keele, Staffs. ST5 5BG, U.K.

Abstract

The St David's Head Intrusion, exposed in North Pembrokeshire, is a tholeiitic sill up to 570 m thick, comprising principally mafic gabbros, which are in part layered. Layering varies from the centimetre to the metre scale. A range of gabbroic compositions is present, defining seven major petrological types, which are cut by thin silicic (aplitic) veins.

Log–log plots of incompatible elements from the various lithological units indicate that all of the rocks in the intrusion are petrogenetically linked, although a variety of processes has been operative. Roach (1969) considered the quartz gabbros and dolerites, which form an envelope around the other units, to relate most closely to the parental composition. However, the least evolved compositions in the intrusion are from the xenolithic laminated olivine gabbros, although these mafic compositions are due primarily to the presence of abundant, mafic, cognate xenoliths. These xenoliths are thought to relate to an earlier episode of crystal accumulation in a high-level magma chamber. The various laminated gabbros reflect crystal accumulation in situ after magma emplacement, leading in certain layers to extreme enrichments in Fe, Ti, and V, related to high modal proportions of cumulus ilmenite. Further in situ crystallisation led to differentiation of the residual liquid, producing more silicic gabbros with well-developed granophyric textures, the granophyre reflecting the silicic residuum. Extreme differentiation, possibly combined with expulsion of silicic residual liquid during crystal accumulation and compaction, resulted in the cross-cutting aplite veins.

Three different types of layering are present in the intrusion. Firstly, preferred orientation of tabular minerals in the laminated gabbro units is thought to result from discrete sedimentation episodes from a convecting magma chamber. Secondly, macrorhythmic modal layering up to 1 m thick consists of an alternation of relatively ilmenite-rich and ilmenite-poor layers in the laminated gabbro units, although the reason for the modal variation is not certain. Thirdly, a centimetre-scale felsic–mafic microrhythmic layering is present in the envelope quartz gabbros and dolerites, which is similar to the inch-scale layering in the Stillwater Igneous Complex. This layering is thought to relate to metasomatic reaction in the gabbro in the presence of water at a late magmatic stage. Overall, these various lithological units themselves define a large-scale layering in the intrusion.

Combined, the petrological and geochemical data suggest that the St David's Head Intrusion was not emplaced in a single event. Rather, a series of magma pulses, of contrasting compositions but petrogenetically linked, was intruded. Some of the chemical variations now seen existed prior to emplacement, indicating the former presence of high-level crustal magma chambers, while other variations developed as a result of in situ crystallisation processes and related chemical differentiation.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Royal Society of Edinburgh 1994

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

Bevins, R. E. 1982. Petrology and geochemistry of the Fishguard Volcanic Complex, Wales. GEOL J 17, 121.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bevins, R. E. & Roach, R. A. 1979. Early Ordovician volcanism in Dyfed, S.W. Wales. In Harris, A. L., Holland, C. H. & Leake, B. E. (eds) The Caledonides of the British Isles–reviewed. SPEC PUBL GEOL SOC LONDON 8, 603–9.Google Scholar
Bevins, R. E. & Roach, R. A. 1982. Ordovician igneous activity in south-west Dyfed. In Bassett, M. G. (ed.) Geological Excursions in Dyfed, South-west Wales, 65–80. Cardiff: National Museum of Wales.Google Scholar
Bevins, R. E. & Rowbotham, G. 1983. Low-grade metamorphism within the Welsh sector of the paratectonic Caledonides. GEOL J 18, 141–68.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bevins, R. E., Kokelaar, B. P. & Dunkley, P. N. 1984. Petrology and geochemistry of lower to middle Ordovician igneous rocks in Wales: a volcanic arc to marginal basin transition. PROC GEOL ASS 95, 337–47.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bevins, R. E., Lees, G. J. & Roach, R. A. 1989. Ordovician intrusions of the Strumble Head-Mynydd Preseli region, Wales: lateral extensions of the Fishguard Volcanic Complex. J GEOL SOC LONDON 146, 113–23.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bevins, R. E., Lees, G. J. & Roach, R. A. 1991. Ordovician bimodal volcanism in SW Wales: geochemical evidence for petrogenesis of the silicic rocks. J GEOL SOC LONDON 148, 719–29.Google Scholar
Bevins, R. E., Lees, G. J. & Roach, R. A. 1992. Petrogenesis of Ordovician igneous rocks in the southern part of the Welsh Basin. GEOL MAG 129, 615–24.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Boudreau, A. E. 1987. Pattern formation during crystallization and the formation of fine scale layering. In Parsons, I. (ed.) Origins of Igneous Layering, 453–71. Dordrecht: Reidel.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brandeis, G. & Jaupart, C. 1986. On the interaction between convection and crystallization in cooling magma chambers. EARTH PLANET SCI LETT 77, 345–61.Google Scholar
Campbell, I. H. 1978. Some problems with cumulus theory. LITHOS 11, 311–23.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cattermole, P. L. 1976. The crystallisation and differentiation of a layered intrusion of hydrated alkali olivine-basalt parentage at Rhiw, North Wales. GEOL J 11, 4570.Google Scholar
Elsden, J. V. 1905. On the igneous rocks occurring between St. David's Head and Strumble Head, Pembrokeshire. Q J GEOL SOC LONDON 61, 579607.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Elsden, J. V. 1908. The St. David's Head 'Rock Series', Pembrokeshire. Q J GEOL SOC LONDON 64, 273–96.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fujii, T. 1974. Crystal settling in a sill. LITHOS 7, 133–37.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gibb, F. G. F. & Henderson, C. M. B. 1992. Convection and crystal settling in sills. CONTRIB MINERAL PETROL 109, 538–45.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hawkins, T. R. W. 1970. Hornblende gabbros and picrites at Rhiw, Caernarvonshire. GEOL J 7, 124.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hess, H. H. 1960. Stillwater Igneous Complex, Montana–a quantitative mineralogical study. GEOL SOC AM MEM 80, 230 pp.Google Scholar
Hughes, C. J. 1982. Igneous Petrology. Developments in Petrology 1. Amsterdam: Elsevier.Google Scholar
Hunter, R. H. & Sparks, R. S. J. 1987. The differentiation of the Skaergaard Intrusion. CONTRIB MINERAL PETROL 95, 451–61.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Huppert, H. E. & Sparks, R. S. J. 1980. The fluid dynamics of a basaltic magma chamber replenished by an influx of hot, dense, ultrabasic magma. CONTRIB MINERAL PETROL 75, 279–89.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Huppert, H. E. & Sparks, R. S. J. 1989. Chilled margins in igneous rocks. EARTH PLANET SCI LETT 92, 397405.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Irvine, T. N. 1974. Petrology of the Duke Island ultramafic complex. southeastern Alaska. MEM GEOL SOC AM 138.Google Scholar
Irvine, T. N. 1980. Magmatic infiltration metasomatism, double diffusive fractional crystallisation, and adcumulus growth in the Muskox intrusion and other layered intrusions. In Hargreaves, R. B. (ed.) Physics of Magmatic Processes, 325–83. Princeton N.J.: Princeton University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Irvine, T. N. 1982. Terminology for layered intrusions. J PETROL 23, 127–62.Google Scholar
Irvine, T. N. 1987. Layering and related structures in the Duke Island and Skaergaard Intrusions: similarities, differences, and origins. In Parsons, I. (ed.) Origins of Igneous Layering, 185245. Dordrecht: Reidel.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kokelaar, B. P., Howells, M. F., Bevins, R. E., Roach, R. A. & Dunkley, P. N. 1984. The Ordovician marginal basin of Wales. In Kokelaar, B. P. & Howells, M. F. (eds.) Marginal Basin Geology: Volcanic and Associated Sedimentary and Tectonic Processes in Modern and Ancient Marginal Basins. SPEC PUBL GEOL SOC LONDON 16, 245–69.Google Scholar
Leat, P. T. & Thorpe, R. S. 1989. Snowdon Volcanic Group basalts and the cessation of Caledonian subduction by the Longvillian. J GEOL SOC LONDON 146, 965–70.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
McBirney, A. R. & Noyes, R. M. 1979. Crystallization and layering of the Skaergaard Intrusion. J PETROL 20, 487554.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
MacDonald, R., Sparks, R. S. J., Sigurdsson, H., Mattey, D. P.. McGarvie, D. W. & Smith, R. L. 1987. The 1885 eruption of Askja volcano, Iceland: combined fractional crystallization and selective contamination in the generation of rhyolitic magma. MINERAL MAG 51, 183202.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Marsh, B. D. 1988. Crystal capture, sorting, and retention in convecting magma. GEOL SOC AM BULL 100, 1720–37.2.3.CO;2>CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Marsh, B. D. 1990. Crystal capture, sorting, and retention: reply. GEOL SOC AM BULL 102, 849–50.Google Scholar
Merriman, R. J., Bevins, R. E. & Ball, T. K. 1986. Petrological and geochemical variations with the Tal-y-Fan Intrusion: a study of element mobility during low-grade metamorphism with implications for petrotectonic modelling. J PETROL 27, 1409–36.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Morimoto, N. 1988. Nomenclature of pyroxenes. AM MINERAL 73, 1123–33.Google Scholar
Nakamura, N. 1974. Determination of REE, Ba, Fe, Mg, Na, and K in carbonaceous and ordinary chondrites. GEOCHIM COSMOCHIM ACTA 38, 757–75.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Naslund, H. R. 1984. Petrology of the Upper Border Series of the Skaergaard Intrusion. J PETROL 25, 185212.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Parsons, I. 1987. Origins of Igneous Layering. Dordrecht: Reidel.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pearce, J. A. & Cann, J. R. 1973. Tectonic setting of basic volcanic rocks determined using trace element analysis. EARTH PLANET SCI LETT 19, 290300.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Roach, R. A. 1969. The composite nature of the St. David's Head and Carn Llidi intrusions of North Pembrokeshire. In Wood, A. (ed.) The Pre-Cambrian and Lower Palaeozoic Rocks in Wales, 409–33. Cardiff: University of Wales Press.Google Scholar
Robinson, D. & Bevins, R. E. 1986. Incipient metamorphism in the Welsh back-arc basin. J METAMORPHIC GEOL 4, 101–13.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Shelley, D. 1993. Igneous and Metamorphic Rocks under the Microscope. London: Chapman & Hall.Google Scholar
Shirley, D. N. 1987. Differentiation and compaction in the Palisades Sill, New Jersey. J PETROL 28, 835–65.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sørensen, H. 1969. Rhythmic igneous layering in peralkaline intrusions. An essay review on Ilimaussaq (Greenland) and Lovozero (Kola, USSR). LITHOS 2, 261–83.Google Scholar
Sørensen, H. & Larsen, L. M., 1987. Layering in the Ilimaussaq Alkaline Intrusion, South Greenland. In Parsons, I. (ed.) Origins of Igneous Layering, 1–28. Dordrecht: Reidel.Google Scholar
Sparks, R. S. J., Huppert, H. E. & Turner, J. S. 1984. The fluid dynamics of evolving magma chambers. PHIL TRANS R SOC LONDON SER A 310, 511–34.Google Scholar
Sparks, R. S. J., Koyaguchi, T. & Hallworth, M. A. 1993. Origin of modal and rhythmic igneous layering by sedimentation in a convecting magma chamber. NATURE 361, 246–9.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Upton, B. G. J. 1987. Gabbroic, syenogabbroic and syenitic cumulates of the Tugtutoq Younger Giant Dyke Complex, South Greenland. In Parsons, I. (ed.) Origins of Igneous Layering, 93123. Dordrecht: Reidel.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wagner, L. R. & Brown, G. M. 1968. Layered Igneous Rocks. Edinburgh: Oliver & Boyd Ltd.Google Scholar
Wood, D. A., Joron, J.-L. & Treuil, M. 1979. A re-appraisal of the use of trace elements to classify and discriminate between magma series erupted in different tectonic settings. EARTH PLANET SCI LETT 45, 326–36.CrossRefGoogle Scholar