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Heavy-mineral, mineral-chemical and zircon age constraints on the provenence of Triassic sandstones from the Devon Coast, southern Britain

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Heavy-mineral, mineral-chemical and zircon age constraints on the provenence of Triassic sandstones from the Devon Coast, southern Britain. / Morton, Andrew; Hounslow, Mark; Frei, Dirk.
In: Geologos, Vol. 19, No. 1-2, 05.2013, p. 67-85.

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@article{0fd3d6dd9a964c1ea7401bf5f911f6dd,
title = "Heavy-mineral, mineral-chemical and zircon age constraints on the provenence of Triassic sandstones from the Devon Coast, southern Britain",
abstract = "An integrated heavy-mineral, mineral-chemical and zircon-dating study of the Triassic succession exposed on the south Devon coast, in the western part of the Wessex Basin, indicates derivation from a combination of granitic and metasedimentary lithologies of ages of mostly over 550 Ma. These sources were probably located at a relatively proximal location near the southern margin of the basin. Derivation from more distal sources in the Armorican Massif or local Variscan sources to the west appears unlikely in view of the scarcity of Permo-Carboniferous (Variscan-age) zircons. The Budleigh Salterton Pebble Bed Formation was derived from a different combination of source lithologies than the Otter Sandstone Formation, the former including staurolite-grade metasediments that were absent in the catchment area of the Otter Sandstone. The Devon coast succession has provenance characteristics that differ from equivalent sandstones further east in the Wessex Basin, and from sandstones in the East Irish Sea Basin to the north. These differences indicate that sediment supply patterns to the linked Triassic basin systems in southern Britain are complex, involving multiple distinct sub-catchment areas, and that heavy-mineral studies have considerable potential for unravelling these sub- -catchment area sources.",
keywords = "heavy minerals, zircon, provenance, Triassic, Devon",
author = "Andrew Morton and Mark Hounslow and Dirk Frei",
year = "2013",
month = may,
doi = "10.2478/logos-2013-0005",
language = "English",
volume = "19",
pages = "67--85",
journal = "Geologos",
publisher = "Adam Mickiewicz University Press",
number = "1-2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Heavy-mineral, mineral-chemical and zircon age constraints on the provenence of Triassic sandstones from the Devon Coast, southern Britain

AU - Morton, Andrew

AU - Hounslow, Mark

AU - Frei, Dirk

PY - 2013/5

Y1 - 2013/5

N2 - An integrated heavy-mineral, mineral-chemical and zircon-dating study of the Triassic succession exposed on the south Devon coast, in the western part of the Wessex Basin, indicates derivation from a combination of granitic and metasedimentary lithologies of ages of mostly over 550 Ma. These sources were probably located at a relatively proximal location near the southern margin of the basin. Derivation from more distal sources in the Armorican Massif or local Variscan sources to the west appears unlikely in view of the scarcity of Permo-Carboniferous (Variscan-age) zircons. The Budleigh Salterton Pebble Bed Formation was derived from a different combination of source lithologies than the Otter Sandstone Formation, the former including staurolite-grade metasediments that were absent in the catchment area of the Otter Sandstone. The Devon coast succession has provenance characteristics that differ from equivalent sandstones further east in the Wessex Basin, and from sandstones in the East Irish Sea Basin to the north. These differences indicate that sediment supply patterns to the linked Triassic basin systems in southern Britain are complex, involving multiple distinct sub-catchment areas, and that heavy-mineral studies have considerable potential for unravelling these sub- -catchment area sources.

AB - An integrated heavy-mineral, mineral-chemical and zircon-dating study of the Triassic succession exposed on the south Devon coast, in the western part of the Wessex Basin, indicates derivation from a combination of granitic and metasedimentary lithologies of ages of mostly over 550 Ma. These sources were probably located at a relatively proximal location near the southern margin of the basin. Derivation from more distal sources in the Armorican Massif or local Variscan sources to the west appears unlikely in view of the scarcity of Permo-Carboniferous (Variscan-age) zircons. The Budleigh Salterton Pebble Bed Formation was derived from a different combination of source lithologies than the Otter Sandstone Formation, the former including staurolite-grade metasediments that were absent in the catchment area of the Otter Sandstone. The Devon coast succession has provenance characteristics that differ from equivalent sandstones further east in the Wessex Basin, and from sandstones in the East Irish Sea Basin to the north. These differences indicate that sediment supply patterns to the linked Triassic basin systems in southern Britain are complex, involving multiple distinct sub-catchment areas, and that heavy-mineral studies have considerable potential for unravelling these sub- -catchment area sources.

KW - heavy minerals

KW - zircon

KW - provenance

KW - Triassic

KW - Devon

U2 - 10.2478/logos-2013-0005

DO - 10.2478/logos-2013-0005

M3 - Journal article

VL - 19

SP - 67

EP - 85

JO - Geologos

JF - Geologos

IS - 1-2

ER -