Multiple post-Caledonian exhumation epsiodes across Northwest Scotland revealed by apatite fission track analysis

Abstract

The post-Caledonian exhumation history of NW Scotland is a controversial issue, with some studies advocating largely continual emergence whereas others suggest dominantly early Palaeogene plume-driven uplift. Apatite fission-track analysis (AFTA) for samples of Precambrian basement and Permian–Cretaceous sediments from onshore and offshore reveal multiple phases of post-Caledonian cooling: Triassic (beginning 245-225 Ma), Cretaceous (140-130 Ma; 110-90 Ma) and Cenozoic (65-60 Ma; 40-25 Ma; 15-10 Ma), all of which are interpreted at least in part as recording exhumation. Basement and sedimentary cover rocks display similar thermal histories, emphasising the regional nature of these episodes and implying that sedimentary outliers represent the remnants of previously more extensive sequences. Significant thicknesses of Jurassic rocks may once have covered NW Scotland. Paleocene palaeothermal effects are most pronounced in the vicinity of igneous centres, probably reflecting combined effects of heating by elevated heat flow, deeper burial and hydrothermal activity. Most of the region underwent kilometre-scale Neogene exhumation. Contrary to the common assumption of monotonic cooling and denudation histories, integration of geological evidence with AFTA data defines an episodic thermal history involving repeated cycles of burial and exhumation. We suggest that onshore passive margins and continental interiors may also best be characterised by similar histories

Similar works

This paper was published in NERC Open Research Archive.

Having an issue?

Is data on this page outdated, violates copyrights or anything else? Report the problem now and we will take corresponding actions after reviewing your request.