Proterozoic eon |
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Geologic timescale of the Proterozoic |
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The Cymru Terrane is one of five inferred fault bounded terranes that make up the basement rocks of the southern United Kingdom. The other notable geological terranes are the Charnwood Terrane, Fenland Terrane, Wrekin Terrane and the Monian Composite Terrane. [1] In this article the definition of terrane is that implying rocks associated with the composition of the Precambrian basement. The Cymru Terrane is bounded to the northwest by the Menai Strait Fault System and to the southeast by the Pontesford Lineament. The geological terrane to the west is the Monian Composite Terrane and to the east is Wrekin Terrane. [1] The majority of rocks in the area are associated with the outcrops that are evident at the faulted boundaries. [2] [3]
The Proterozoic rocks of the Cymru Terrane are typified in North Wales by the Arfon Group, Sarn Complex and the Twt Hill Granite. [1] The former is in the Bangor area (S & SW) with the latter two located on the Llyn Peninsula. The St Davids Granophyre and the Pebidian Supergroup are located on the coastline of St Davids Peninsula. Inferred Proterozoic volcanic deposits are noted in the Bryn-Teg Borehole (Trawsfynydd, Gwynedd). [1] [4]
The Padarn Tuff, which is thought to be contemporaneous with the Sarn Complex, is unconformable with the overlying Fachwen Formation and the unconformity has been constrained with dates noted of 604.7 Ma+/-1.6Ma from the tuffs and 572.5 Ma+/-1.2Ma from the Fachwen Formation. [5] Information on the basement is somewhat sparse with no zircons noted to be older than 617 to 638 Ma. [5] However, there are outcrops of the Parwyd Gneiss which are retrogressed granitoid gneiss and garnet amphibolite that occur with the Llyn Shear Zone. [1] This is conjectured to be one of two probabilities, either as an exotic sliver, or as a metamorphic slice from the Monian Composite Terrane. The Granitoid Gneiss has Sm-Nd ages of 1350 Ma which is in the same temporal region as the Sarn Granite [1] [5]
In the southwest of Wales is the St Davids Granophyre the stratigraphical relationship of which was subject of heated debates towards the end of the 19th Century predominantly between Sir Archibald Geikie and Henry Hicks. Geikie (then director of the Geological Survey) insisted upon the Pebidian Supergroup and the high-level intrusion being placed in the Cambrian sequence with Hicks [6] [7] taking the opposing view and suggesting that the Granophyre which cross cuts the Pebidian Supergroup should be placed in the Precambrian and by consequence placing the Pebidian Supergroup in the Precambrian. The issue was finally resolved by Green [8] by revealing, in an excavation, an unconformity in which an excavation of a Cambrian basal conglomerate is shown to cut the granophyre. [1] [8]
The St David's Granophyre has historically been incorrectly assigned to be alaskite or trondhjemite due to low concentrations of potassium feldspar but this has been shown to be an alteration product from its original calc-alkaline granite which is noted to exhibit a volcanic arc signature. [9] Correlation of the granophyric intrusion with the Arfon Group rather than the nearby Coomb Volcanic Formation has been suggested [10] with a tentative U-Pb isotopic age of 625+/-25Ma being suggested. [1] [11]
The largest plutonic body in the terrane has limited outcrop and is sheared by the Llyn Shear Zone in the west and covered by later (Arenig) sediments to the east. [1] Altered to Greenschist facies the pluton contains a bimodal suite of gabbro-diorite, monzogranite (Sarn Granite) and granodiorite. [11]
The Sarn Granite is leucocratic and covers an expanse of c.6 km^2 in contrast to the gabbro and diorite that exist as small and scattered exposures. The dioritic component has been confirmed as having a Neoproterozoic age of 614Ma+/-2Ma using U-Pb Zircon dating. [11] So therefore, the shearing of the Llyn is also temporally constrained by the date.
This is a small fine-grained, leucocratic intrusive body that cuts the Padarn Tuff at the western end of the Bangor-Caernarfon Ridge. [1] [3]
The thick sequences of volcano-sedimentary facies are present in North Wales (as the Arfon Group) and South Wales (as the Pebidian Supergroup) and are generally considered to be coeval but are geochemically distinct, showing acidic and basic qualities respectively. [10] [11] Both are cut by minor granitic intrusions.
The Pebidian Supergroup is interbedded basic lavas and acid tuffs, is cut by the St David's Granophyre. [1] There is evidence presented that subaerial and subaqueous deposition has occurred in a Welsh Basin that is likely to have been undergoing varying rates of subsidence thus promoting aerial emergence. Greenschist alteration is in keeping with the regional metamorphism that is characteristic of Welsh Neoproterozoic rocks. [10]
In the Pebidian Supergroup the basal unit is largely basaltic and exhibits columnar jointing, autobrecciated lavas, scoriaceous and fine grained tuffs. The volcano-sediments have an increased acid component until the uppermost beds of the unit exhibit the basaltic influence once again. [3] Such information is preserved in the Rhosson Group as autobrecciated lava, tuffs and scoria deposits. [1] [3]
This volcano-sedimentary group incorporates over 4000m of deposits and were previously considered to be of Cambrian age. U-Pb data suggests that the whole succession is indeed Precambrian Neoproterozoic age. [12] Exposure of the lower unit (Padarn Tuff) is exhibited on a ridge between Bangor and Caernarfon and also on a ridge near Llyn Padarn [1] This is noted to be a thick sequence of acid ash flow tuffs and exhibits welding and are thought to be rapid deposition of thin air-fall tuffs and rhyolite flows placed in a bounded half-graben (or graben) . [12] Isotope data shows a U-Pb zircon from the lower part of the succession as 614+/-2Ma [13] and 604.7+/-1.6Ma [5] confirms a Neoproterozoic age. [1]
These strata have an angular and discordant relationship with both formations having variable thickness controlled by bounding fault lines that are likely to have controlled the depositional regime of the rocks. [1] [12] The formations exist to the west of the Aber Dinlle Fault. The Minfordd Formation is a sandstone dominated epiclastic and tuffaceous lithology which has a broad upward fining sequence with the presence of thick welded and non-welded ash-flow tuffs that elucidates an amount of volcanism. [1] [12] The basal rocks of the Minfordd Formation contain clasts of granite, vein quartz, quartzitic sandstone, quartzose schists and were thought to be Cambrian basal conglomerate. The Bangor Formation overlies the Minfordd Formation and it underlies the Llanberis Slates and is a similar lithology to the Minfordd Formation excepting the basal conglomerate. [1] [12]
This is thought to be the lateral equivalent of the Bangor and Minfordd Formations on the eastern side of the Aber Dinelle Fault. The Fachwen and Bangor Formations are both dominated by acidic volcanic deposits but they also contain minor basic tuffs that preserve scoria textures which suggest a proximal source. [1] [3]
This outcrops mainly on Anglesey but a sliver of it also occurs along the Berw Fault and its properties are similar to that of the Arfon Group ash-flow tuff and as such constrain the docking of the western Monian Composite Terrane. [5] [13] Although evidence can be interpreted to the contrary as the Bwlch Gwyn outcrop may be faulted post-Berw and pre-Arenig. [1]
The Bryn-teg borehole is located near Trawsfynydd in the Harlech Dome and exhibits over 140 m of Neoproterozoic rocks. There is a sharp erosional contact with the Cambrian Dolwen Formation. [1]
No Ediacaran fauna has been found in the Welsh Terrane to date. The age of the Bryn-teg Volcanic Formation is constrained by Lower Cambrian foraminifera in overlying beds. The Playsolenites cooperi are only otherwise known in the Placentian of SE Newfoundland. [14]
The geology of Shropshire is very diverse with a large number of periods being represented at outcrop. The bedrock consists principally of sedimentary rocks of Palaeozoic and Mesozoic age, surrounding restricted areas of Precambrian metasedimentary and metavolcanic rocks. The county hosts in its Quaternary deposits and landforms, a significant record of recent glaciation. The exploitation of the Coal Measures and other Carboniferous age strata in the Ironbridge area made it one of the birthplaces of the Industrial Revolution. There is also a large amount of mineral wealth in the county, including lead and baryte. Quarrying is still active, with limestone for cement manufacture and concrete aggregate, sandstone, greywacke and dolerite for road aggregate, and sand and gravel for aggregate and drainage filters. Groundwater is an equally important economic resource.
The geology of Wales is complex and varied; its study has been of considerable historical significance in the development of geology as a science. All geological periods from the Cryogenian to the Jurassic are represented at outcrop, whilst younger sedimentary rocks occur beneath the seas immediately off the Welsh coast. The effects of two mountain-building episodes have left their mark in the faulting and folding of much of the Palaeozoic rock sequence. Superficial deposits and landforms created during the present Quaternary period by water and ice are also plentiful and contribute to a remarkably diverse landscape of mountains, hills and coastal plains.
The geology of Tasmania is complex, with the world's biggest exposure of diabase, or dolerite. The rock record contains representatives of each period of the Neoproterozoic, Paleozoic, Mesozoic and Cenozoic eras. It is one of the few southern hemisphere areas that were glaciated during the Pleistocene with glacial landforms in the higher parts. The west coast region hosts significant mineralisation and numerous active and historic mines.
The Carolina Terrane, also called the Carolina Superterrane or Carolinia, is an exotic terrane running ~370 miles (600 km) approximately North-South from central Georgia to central Virginia in the United States. It constitutes a major part of the eastern Piedmont Province.
Uriconian rocks are volcanic rocks found in parts of Shropshire, United Kingdom. The name relates to Uriconio, the Latin name for an Iron Age hillfort on the summit of the Wrekin, a hill formed of Uriconian rock.
The Longmyndian Supergroup is a 6,000-metre-thick (20,000 ft) sequence of Late Precambrian rocks that outcrop between the Pontesford–Linley Fault System and the Church Stretton Fault System in the Welsh Borderland Fault System. The supergroup consists of two major geological groups, the Stretton Group and the overlying Wentnor Group. The rocks are a generally regressive sequence from basinal facies to clastic sedimentation. The rocks are thought to be derived from Uriconian mountains that were formed during the southward subduction of an oceanic plate beneath a continental block. The rocks have since been folded due to fault movements and plunge gently to the south.
The Pebidian Supergroup is an Ediacaran lithostratigraphic supergroup in Pembrokeshire, west Wales. The term 'Pebidian' was coined by geologist Henry Hicks in 1876 and published in a scientific paper in the Quarterly Journal of the Geological Society in the following year. It was named for Pebidiauc, an ancient local name for the St Davids area.
The Wrekin Terrane is one of five inferred fault bounded terranes that make up the basement rocks of the southern United Kingdom. The other notable geological terranes in the region are the Charnwood Terrane, Fenland Terrane, Cymru Terrane and the Monian Composite Terrane. The Wrekin Terrane is bounded to the west by the Welsh Borderland Fault System and to the east by the Malvern Lineament. The geological terrane to the west is the Cymru Terrane and to the east is Charnwood Terrane. The majority of rocks in the area are associated with the outcrops that are evident at the faulted boundaries.
The Unkar Group is a sequence of strata of Proterozoic age that are subdivided into five geologic formations and exposed within the Grand Canyon, Arizona, Southwestern United States. The Unkar Group is the basal formation of the Grand Canyon Supergroup. The Unkar is about 1,600 to 2,200 m thick and composed, in ascending order, of the Bass Formation, Hakatai Shale, Shinumo Quartzite, Dox Formation, and Cardenas Basalt. The Cardenas Basalt and Dox Formation are found mostly in the eastern region of Grand Canyon. The Shinumo Quartzite, Hakatai Shale, and Bass Formation are found in central Grand Canyon. The Unkar Group accumulated approximately between 1250 and 1104 Ma. In ascending order, the Unkar Group is overlain by the Nankoweap Formation, about 113 to 150 m thick; the Chuar Group, about 1,900 m (6,200 ft) thick; and the Sixtymile Formation, about 60 m (200 ft) thick. These are all of the units of the Grand Canyon Supergroup. The Unkar Group makes up approximately half of the thickness of the Grand Canyon Supergroup.
The Arfon Group is a stratigraphically defined geological group of rocks that are present in the Cymru Terrane around Bangor in North Wales, United Kingdom. The group contains volcanogenic conglomeratic sandstone, fine-grained tuffite and tuffaceous sediment.
The Sarn Complex is a group of closely related igneous rocks that intrude and cut through other rock lithologies in the Cymru Terrane in Wales. The complex outcrops on the Llyn Peninsula in a variety of places including Mynydd Cefnamlwch and the flanks of Pen y Gopa.
The Colonsay Group is an estimated 5,000 m thick sequence of mildly metamorphosed Neoproterozoic sedimentary rocks that outcrop on the islands of Colonsay, Islay and Oronsay and the surrounding seabed. They have been correlated with the Grampian Group, the oldest part of the Dalradian Supergroup.
The Neoproterozoic Chuar Group consists of 1,600 m (5,200 ft) of exceptionally well-preserved, unmetamorphosed sedimentary strata that is composed of about 85% mudrock. The Group is the approximate upper half of the Grand Canyon Supergroup, overlain by the thin, in comparison, Sixtymile Formation, the top member of the multi-membered Grand Canyon Supergroup. The outcrop of the Chuar Group strata is limited to exposures along the western bank of the Colorado River in a 150 km2 (58 sq mi) area of the eastern Grand Canyon, Arizona. The strata of the Chuar Group have been subdivided into the Galeros Formation (lower) and the Kwagunt Formation (upper) using the base of the prominent, thick sandstone unit.
The Sixtymile Formation is a very thin accumulation of sandstone, siltstone, and breccia underlying the Tapeats Sandstone that is exposed in only four places in the Chuar Valley. These exposures occur atop Nankoweap Butte and within Awatubi and Sixtymile Canyons in the eastern Grand Canyon, Arizona. The maximum preserved thickness of the Sixtymile Formation is about 60 m (200 ft). The actual depositional thickness of the Sixtymile Formation is unknown owing to erosion prior to deposition of the Tapeats Sandstone.
The Aravalli Mountain Range is a northeast-southwest trending orogenic belt in the northwest part of India and is part of the Indian Shield that was formed from a series of cratonic collisions. The Aravalli Mountains consist of the Aravalli and Delhi fold belts, and are collectively known as the Aravalli-Delhi orogenic belt. The whole mountain range is about 700 km long. Unlike the much younger Himalayan section nearby, the Aravalli Mountains are believed much older and can be traced back to the Proterozoic Eon. They are arguably the oldest geological feature on Earth. The collision between the Bundelkhand craton and the Marwar craton is believed to be the primary mechanism for the development of the mountain range.
The geology of Ghana is primarily very ancient crystalline basement rock, volcanic belts and sedimentary basins, affected by periods of igneous activity and two major orogeny mountain building events. Aside from modern sediments and some rocks formed within the past 541 million years of the Phanerozoic Eon, along the coast, many of the rocks in Ghana formed close to one billion years ago or older leading to five different types of gold deposit formation, which gave the region its former name Gold Coast.
The geology of Yukon includes sections of ancient Precambrian Proterozoic rock from the western edge of the proto-North American continent Laurentia, with several different island arc terranes added through the Paleozoic, Mesozoic and Cenozoic, driving volcanism, pluton formation and sedimentation.
The South China Craton or South China Block is one of the Precambrian continental blocks in China. It is traditionally divided into the Yangtze Block in the NW and the Cathaysia Block in the SE. The Jiangshan–Shaoxing Fault represents the suture boundary between the two sub-blocks. Recent study suggests that the South China Block possibly has one more sub-block which is named the Tolo Terrane. The oldest rocks in the South China Block occur within the Kongling Complex, which yields zircon U–Pb ages of 3.3–2.9 Ga.
The Torridonian is the informal name given to a sequence of Mesoproterozoic to Neoproterozoic sedimentary rocks that outcrop in a strip along the northwestern coast of Scotland and some parts of the Inner Hebrides from the Isle of Mull in the southwest to Cape Wrath in the northeast. They lie unconformably on the Archaean to Paleoproterozoic basement rocks of the Lewisian complex and unconformably beneath the Cambrian to Lower Ordovician rocks of the Ardvreck Group.
The geology of Anglesey, the largest (714 km2) island in Wales is some of the most complex in the country. Anglesey has relatively low relief, the 'grain' of which runs northeast–southwest, i.e. ridge and valley features extend in that direction reflecting not only the trend of the late Precambrian and Palaeozoic age bedrock geology but also the direction in which glacial ice traversed and scoured the island during the last ice age. It was realised in the 1980s that the island is composed of multiple terranes, recognition of which is key to understanding its Precambrian and lower Palaeozoic evolution. The interpretation of the island's geological complexity has been debated amongst geologists for decades and recent research continues in that vein.