Stephenson, D., Bevins, R.E., Millward, D., Highton, A.J., Parsons, I., Stone, P. & Wadsworth, W.J. 1999. Caledonian Igneous Rocks of Great Britain. Geological Conservation Review Series No. 17, JNCC, Peterborough, ISBN 1 86107 471 9. The original source material for these web pages has been made available by the JNCC under the Open Government Licence 3.0. Full details in the JNCC Open Data Policy
5. 'Nordmarkite' (quartz-microsyenite)
Introduction
This rock type occurs as sills in Assynt (Figure 7.2) and near Ullapool in the Achall structure (Figure 7.1). Their distribution is much more restricted than other types in the thrust belt because they are invariably found emplaced very close to the Moine Thrust itself, either in the Moine rocks just above the thrust plane, or in Cambro-Ordovician strata immediately below. They are thus unique in that their emplacement was apparently localized by the thrust structure itself, and in being emplaced in part in the Moine Nappe. The thickest sill, some 10 m thick, is emplaced just above the Moine Thrust at Druim Poll EĆ²ghainn [NC 212 090] south of Knockan. Sabine (1953) reported that one of the least altered examples comes from a sill on Maol Calaisceig east of Ullapool (around [NH 144 944]) and he provides a map (Sabine, 1953, fig. 6) and a detailed petrographical description. A detailed structural map of the Achall Culmination is in Elliott and Johnson (1980, fig. 22). They point out that the sill described by Sabine is slightly oblique to the foliation of the Moine rocks, so that its proximity to the Moine Thrust is to some extent fortuitous. Nevertheless the 'nordmarkites' do in general seem to be concentrated near the Moine thrust plane. The complete absence of any other members of the alkaline suite in the Moine Nappe is extremely striking and implies that the 'nordmarkites' were emplaced late in the tectonic history of Assynt (Halliday et al., 1987, table 1). As many examples are considerably deformed, late movements on the Moine Thrust must have occurred. This is an important conclusion for the tectonic reconstruction of the Moine thrust zone.
The 'nordmarkite' suite is varied petrographically and there is considerable range in quartz content and content of mafic minerals. Thus some are strictly syenites or pyroxene syenites. They are usually composed of variably fractured alkali feldspar crystals, easily visible in hand specimen, set in a finc-graincd matrix of alkali feldspar, variable amounts of quartz, and chlorite. The rocks are strongly alkaline and similar in composition to the Canisp Porphyry in the Foreland, but the structural relationships of these two rock types suggests that the Canisp Porphyry was emplaced early and the 'nordmarkite' sills late. The quartz-syenites of Cnoc-na-Sroine in the Loch Borralan intrusion are also chemically similar and possibly almost contemporaneous (Halliday et al., 1987, table 1). Sabine discusses the possibility that the 'nordmarkites' were metamorphosed in the main regional metamorphism of the Moine, but favours the more modern view that the metamorphic changes occurred during later movements localized on the Moine Thrust.
References