Treagus, J.E. (ed.). 1992. Caledonian Structures in Britain: South of the Midland Valley. Geological Conservation Review Series No. 3. JNCC, Peterborough, ISBN 0 412 47560 X. The original source material for these web pages has been made available by the JNCC under the Open Government Licence 3.0. Full details in the JNCC Open Data Policy
Chapter 1 Caledonian structures
Introduction
J.E. Treagus
The purpose of this volume is to describe and discuss the selected Geological Conservation Review sites which demonstrate structures of Caledonian age (Cambrian to early Devonian), south of the Southern Upland Fault. The sites, of national importance, have been selected to illustrate all the principal features of the Caledonian Orogeny in Britain (Scotland, England and Wales).
The volume has been divided into three sections; the Southern Uplands, the Lake District and Wales, for both geographical and geological reasons. Each of these sections is introduced and an outline of its structural features given, putting the sites into a Caledonian context. The purpose of the following paragraphs is to introduce the principal features of the Caledonian Orogeny in Britain south of the Southern Uplands Fault, so that the three-component sections can be seen in the context both of the British area and of the wider setting of the Caledonian–Appalachian Orogenic Belt.
The Caledonian Orogenic Belt
The Caledonian–Appalachian Orogen can be traced (pre-Atlantic drift), for some 7500 km south-west to north-east, from south-eastern USA through the British Isles to Scandinavia, Greenland, and Ny Friesland
Since the initial plate tectonic model for this orogen (Dewey, 1969; see
The British Caledonides
Scottish Highlands
In the British Isles
Midland Valley
Between the Scottish Highlands and the Southern Uplands lies the enigmatic terrane of the Midland Valley. Apart from some indirect evidence here of a granulite basement, the oldest exposed rocks comprise the Lower Ordovician Ballantrae Complex, commonly interpreted as obducted Iapetus Ocean crust, with a complex and little-understood terrane history. These rocks are unconformably overlain by Middle Ordovician to Middle Silurian sediments which contrast strongly in their sedi-mentology and structural and metamorphic state with the rocks of the Southern Uplands. In the south-east of the Midland Valley, they are very weakly folded and appear to be conformable with the Lower Devonian, although folding preceded Gedinnian Series deposition in the north-east in the Pentland Hills. The Middle Devonian is missing and the Upper Devonian is strongly unconformable on older rocks, with evidence, in this interval, of locally strong folding and faulting.
Another element of the Midland Valley Terrane is a narrow zone of possibly ophiolitic rocks which parallels the Highland Boundary Fault: this has small areas of Arenig Series, Middle Ordovician and Upper Ordovician sediments, each apparently with a distinct structural history.
The Midland Valley has not only a contrasting history compared with terranes to its north-west and south-east, but also a lack of features, sedimentological, magmatic, and structural, that might support continuity. This has led recent workers (for example, Bluck, 1986; Hutton, 1987) to favour the idea that the Midland Valley owes its present position largely to strike-slip movements on its two boundary faults, in preference to previous attempts to integrate it directly into Dewey's (1969;
Southern Uplands
The deformation events that are the subject of this volume are generally construed to be the result of the closing of the Iapetus between the mid-Ordovician Period and the early Devonian, associated with marginally directed subduction zones. The models for this closure are largely based on Dewey (1969) (see
Lake District
On the south-eastern margin, the argument for SE-directed subduction
Wales
The Welsh Basin is now seen as a back-arc extensional basin within continental crust (cf. Dewey, 1969 and
Two particular structural features have provoked discussion. Firstly, there is the arcuate pattern of folds and cleavage from E–W turning to N–S, which has been most commonly attributed to basement control, and regarded by Soper et al. (1987) as part of the same curvature as that seen between the Lake District and the Craven Inliers. Secondly, there is the diminution of deformation south-eastwards, seen as the diminished affects of the Caledonian Orogeny towards the south-east margin of the orogen, represented by the basement rocks of the Welsh Borders and the English Midlands.
Conclusions
Although there are uncertainties concerning the timing and mechanisms of the Southern Upland structures, the three areas are apparently united by their common history of cleavage formation and maximum shortening which climaxed in the early Devonian. Evidence is accumulating (Soper et al., 1987; McKerrow, 1988; Soper, 1988) that this event may be equivalent to the Acadian Orogeny (Emsian in age) of the Canadian Appalachians. One feature of this cleavage that unites the two sides of the Iapetus suture, running through the Solway Firth, is the transection (cross-cutting) of folds by the cleavage, which has now been recognized widely in the Southern Uplands, Lake District and Wales. The Southern Uplands and the Lake District are also united by their flat-lying D2 folds and cleavage, which may be related, in time and space, to the major granite intrusives that characterize both areas.
Another feature which unites the latest Caledonian deformation across the whole of Britain is faulting, much of which is strike-slip and much of that sinistral (Hutton, 1987). The faults range from the Great Glen Fault system in the Scottish Highlands to the Welsh Borderland Fault system (Woodcock and Gibbons, 1988). The minor faults, in the Scottish Highlands, the Southern Uplands, and the Lake District especially, commonly show a more NNE–SSW trend and sinistral displacement. These two features, cleavage transection and faulting, have been used by both Hutton (1987) and Soper et al. (1987) to reconstruct the positions of the British Caledonian terranes and the relative movements and geometries of the margins of Iapetus itself.
Throughout the British Caledonides it is being increasingly recognized that certain structures, both folds and faults, have origins related to basin development that pre-date the main Caledonian structures. This recognition has not only allowed a clearer understanding of the early development of the area, but also removed some apparent tectonic ambiguities. For example, recent studies in both the Southern Uplands and the Lake District have recognized that certain folds are of soft-sediment origin. Similar folds have long been recognized in the Silurian of Wales (Woodcock, 1976) and other anomalous structures there (in older rocks) are also being attributed to this origin. Again, in Wales, early faults have been related to volcanic activity, as well as to facies and thickness changes. Comparable features are now being recognized in the Lake District.
In the Southern Uplands, the major strike faults are seen to have an early history that controlled the development of sedimentation in the accretionary prism, and recently, smaller-scale fractures have been attributed to shortening and extension in the accreting sediments.
Further details and references may be found in the 'Introductions' to the following chapters, which deal individually with the sites in the Southern Uplands, Lake District, and Wales.