Mylonitic rocks of the Moine Thrust-zone in the Assynt Region, North-West Scotland
- 1 January 1960
- journal article
- Published by Geological Society of London in Transactions of the Edinburgh Geological Society
- Vol. 18 (1) , 79-93
- https://doi.org/10.1144/transed.18.1.79
Abstract
The terminology of mylonitic rocks is reviewed. The mylonitic rocks in the thrust-zone are divided on the basis of textures into two groups, distinguished as Primary and Secondary Mylonitic Rocks. The primary mylonitic rocks are characterised by crystalloblastic textures and lack of post-crystalline strain in the constituent grains; texturally, they grade, with increasing grain size, into typical Moine Schists above the thrust-zone. The writer is in agreement with the views originally expressed by Lapworth and Peach as to the origin of these mylonitic rocks: namely, that they were formed in a movement-zone between the Moine Nappe and the Foreland during the regional metamorphism of the Moine Schists. The secondary mylonitic rocks are characterised by cataclastic breakdown of all the minerals; they are formed from primary mylonitic rocks and low-grade Moine Schists, indicating that they originated in a later phase of deformation. The secondary mylonitic rocks are not noticeably diaphthoritic, a feature which is probably due to the low grade of progressive metamorphism in the primary mylonitic rocks and Moine Schists in the vicinity of the thrust-zone. The study indicates at least two periods of mylonitization in the thrust-zone, the earlier of which was contemporaneous with the regional metamorphism of the Moine Schists.This publication has 16 references indexed in Scilit:
- Fluidization as a geological process, and its bearing on the problem of intrusive granitesAmerican Journal of Science, 1954
- Zones of Progressive Regional Metamorphism in the Moine Schists of the Western Highlands of ScotlandGeological Magazine, 1949
- The Micro-fabric of the Moine SchistsGeological Magazine, 1945
- A Fabric Study of some Moine Schists and Associated RocksQuarterly Journal of the Geological Society, 1937
- Mylonites from the San Andreas fault zoneAmerican Journal of Science, 1935
- Age-Problems of the Moine Series of ScotlandGeological Magazine, 1934
- Retrogressive metamorphism and phyllonitizationAmerican Journal of Science, 1931
- XXIII.—The Geology of Prince Charles Foreland, SpitsbergenTransactions of the Royal Society of Edinburgh, 1924
- XXII.—Geology of the Outer Hebrides. Part I.—The Barra IslesTransactions of the Royal Society of Edinburgh, 1924
- The Pseudotachylyte of Parijs (Orange Free State), and its Relation to ‘Trap-Shotten Gneiss’ and ‘Flinty Crush-Rock’Quarterly Journal of the Geological Society, 1916