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Geological evidence for neotectonic activity during deglaciation of the southern Sperrin Mountains, Northern Ireland

✍ Scribed by Jasper Knight


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1999
Tongue
English
Weight
690 KB
Volume
14
Category
Article
ISSN
0267-8179

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✦ Synopsis


In the southern Sperrin Mountains, Northern Ireland, stacked glacigenic sequences that accumulated during deglaciation (ca. 17 000-13 000 yr BP) overlie a basement of jointed and mascerated bedrock. The glacigenic sequences comprise interbedded glaciotectonic shears, diamictic breccias and rock rafts. At one site a normal fault with a metre-scale vertical displacement cuts through part of the sequence and is overlain by a glacial diamict. Sediments at an adjacent site show that faulting and associated hydrothermal activity was related to neotectonic reactivation of pre-existing Caledonian lineaments caused by ice unloading. From stratigraphical and directional evidence, fault reactivation occurred early in the deglaciation after north central Ireland ice had retreated southwards into lowland areas, but before Sperrin Mountain ice readvanced from the north. This relationship provides evidence for the relative timing of neotectonic activity in Northern Ireland, and demonstrates the effects of glacio-isostatic unloading near ice-sheet centres.