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Hyalotuff deltaic deposits in the Ballantrae ophiolite of SW Scotland: evidence for crustal position of the lava sequence

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  03 November 2011

B. J. Bluck
Affiliation:
Department of Geology, University of Glasgow, Glasgow G12 8QQ, Scotland.

Abstract

Hyalotuff deltaic deposits, a high proportion of volcanogenic sediment and a repeated occurrence of conglomerate with well-rounded clasts constitute evidence for the shallow-water origin of spilitic lavas and volcanogenic sediments in an Ordovician ophiolite at Ballantrae, SW Scotland. One section, >1.5 km thick, shows repeated evidence for a shallow-water origin. This implies accumulation in a subsiding area. In this sense the sequence at Ballantrae is in marked contrast to those found in oceanic islands (hot spots) which are known to grow from deep into shallow water. Neither does it compare well with those from ocean ridges which usually begin in deep water and move, with cessation of vulcanicity, into even deeper water.

The lava sequence at Ballantrae compares well with oceanic island-arc and remnant arc deposits where uplift and subsidence is common. This, the occurrence of intermediate and acidic lavas and clasts, and the restricted palaeontological and radiometric ages support an arc-marginal basin origin for the lavas. Diversity in the chemical composition of the lavas may reflect diverse origins within the marginal basin.

An upward coarsening sedimentary sequence was built by a hyalotuff delta which formed in front of advancing lava flows. As the lavas advanced over the sediments so a sequence was generated where these sediments have a source in lava flows which were eventually to overlie them.

Clasts of tholeiite were derived from lavas which are now spilite. This, together with the presence of spilitic lava clasts and tuff immediately beneath the flow suggests that the spilitisation resulted from metasomatic activity associated with the convective circulation of trapped water, with the lava as a heat source.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Royal Society of Edinburgh 1982

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