Abstract
The North Atlantic continental margins have been subject to widespread exhumation, although the timing, magnitude and causes of this uplift and erosion are debated. Exhumation is thought to be most severe across the Irish Sea basin system (Western UK), and recent years have seen an increasing emphasis on the role of Palaeogene underplating as the primary mechanism of uplift. We present a study of palaeothermal and compaction data from the Mochras borehole (NW Wales). Located near the presumed locus of exhumation, Mochras penetrated thick successions of Lower Jurassic and Oligo-Miocene sediments. Our results indicate that both these successions experienced considerably deeper burial prior to early Cretaceous and Neogene exhumation, respectively. Apatite fission-track analysis (AFTA) and vitrinite reflectance data from the borehole reveal evidence for exhumation-related cooling episodes beginning during the Cretaceous (150-80 Ma) and Cenozoic (50-0 Ma). Regional AFTA results and stratigraphic constraints refine the timing estimates to the early Cretaceous (120-115 Ma) and Neogene (20-0 Ma). Estimates of exhumation magnitudes during these episodes based on palaeothermal and compaction data are c. 2.5 krn and c. 1.5 km, respectively Palaeothermal data provide no evidence for elevated Palacogene palaeotemperatures indicative of deeper burial, and thus question the basis of Palaeogene exhumation.
Original language | English |
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Journal | Geological Society. Journal |
Volume | 162 |
Publication status | Published - 1 Jan 2005 |
Keywords
- compaction
- apatite fission-track analysis
- vitrinite reflectance
- exhumation
- Irish Sea