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
Bowness Knott
D.J. Fettes
Introduction
Bowness Knott is bisected by the nearly NE-trending contact between the Ennerdale intrusion to the east and the Skiddaw Group rocks to the west
The Ennerdale intrusion (previously referred to as the Ennerdale 'Granophyre) is one of the major igneous bodies of the Lake District and as such it is a surface expression of the Lake District batholith (Bott, 1974). The intrusion crops out between Buttermere in the north and Wasdale in the south, a distance of c. 14 km with an average width of c. 4 km. It consists predominantly of a relatively uniform pink or grey medium- to fine-grained granite. There are also a number of localized zones of more basic and related hybrid rocks, notably at Burtness Combe above Butter-mere, Bowness Knott, the Bleng Valley and at Mecklin Wood in Wasdale.
The body was first mapped by the early surveyors of the Geological Survey (Ward, 1876). The first comprehensive account was given by Rastall (1906). Subsequent detailed accounts were given for those parts of the mass within the Gosforth (37) and Whitehaven (28) geological sheets by Trotter et al. (1937) and Eastwood et al. (1931) respectively. More recently, the mass and its regional setting were described by Clark (1963) who included petrochemical and petrogenetic discussion.
There has been a number of studies on the radiometric age of the intrusion (Brown et al., 1964; Rundle, 1979; Hughes et al., 1996) and on the geophysical characteristics (Bott, 1974; Lee, 1986; Evans et al., 1994). Many of these studies have focused on the regional setting of the mass, and its age relative to the other igneous complexes and the regional tectonism of the Lake District.
Description
Bowness Knott (333 m) lies on the north side of Ennerdale Water guarding the entrance to the main valley
The contact between the Ennerdale intrusion and the country rocks is steep or near vertical in this area. It runs up a gully near the eastern end of the crags on the south side of Bowness Knott, across the shoulder east of the top, east of Brown How and up the east side of Rake Beck. Over most of its length the contact can be localized to a few metres, though it is only exposed on the south slope of Great Borne. Its trend is parallel to one of the principal joint directions in the intrusion and the country rock.
The country rocks belong to the Buttermere Formation of the Skiddaw Group and are believed to be of late Arenig or early Llanvirn age (Cooper et al., 1995). They are predominantly composed of finely laminated siltstone with subordinate sandstone and mudstone. The bedding strikes around E–W, with low dips to the south; to the north of the GCR site the strike swings nearer to NE–SW. The slump folds and soft-sediment deformational structures characteristic of this formation elsewhere are not significantly developed in this area though small slump folds are cut by a granite vein at one locality
Marginal granitic veining within the Skiddaw Group is generally sparse though where present it may be relatively abundant, for example on the crags above the Bowness Knott car park
The main mass of the Ennerdale intrusion is composed of a relatively uniform pinkish medium- to fine-grained granite, commonly with chloritic clots and white feldspar phenocrysts. Locally, particularly towards the margins, the granite may become more felsitic. Patches of light-coloured microgranite occur within the mass and locally these have transitional contacts with the main granite, though elsewhere they appear to be later; they probably relate to a series of late-stage minor acid intrusions within the mass including microgranites, fine-grained granophyric microgranites and aplitic microgranites (Eastwood et al., 1931; Clark, 1963). The mass is well jointed with two or three near-vertical sets and one sub-horizontal set. The rock consists of quartz, plagioclase, potash feldspar, biotite and chlorite; accessories include epidote, iron oxides, titanite, apatite and zircon. Rastall (1906) showed that granophyric textures are generally absent from the margins of the body and increase towards the centre where, the '... intergrowth becomes continuously finer in texture, and of an increasingly perfect micropegmatitic structure'. Chemical analyses of the granite (Clark, 1963; O'Brien et al., 1985; Millward et al., in press) show the body to be chemically coherent but with anomalously high soda and correspondingly low potash values, suggesting some form of metasomatic exchange. The chemical characteristics are consistent with an I-type granite generated within a volcanic-arc environment.
Basic rocks occur in a zone near the margin of the main mass on the eastern shoulder of Downess Knott. The zone covers an area of c. 500 x 200 m, though the transitional nature of its margins make exact definitions difficult. Within the zone there is a complex inter-relationship of rock types. Three main varieties may be recognized. The first and most basic variety is a dark compact doleritic rock that contains some interstitial potash feldspar (Clark, 1963); the second is a dark-grey dioritic rock which, in part, grades into the third variety comprising the common granite of the mass. On crags at
Minor intrusions are found throughout the GCR site. Clark (1963) described a series of microdiorite dykes on and around Bowness Knott. They vary from 0.2–4 m in width and have SE and SW trends. They are composed of plagioclase and secondary actinolitic amphibole, possibly after pyroxene. Acid dykes also occur, many having a splintery felsitic appearance (Eastwood et al., 1931). A notable example is provided by a 3 m-thick spherulitic felsite which trends ENE and crosses Rake Beck
Interpretation
Rastall (1906) regarded the Ennerdale intrusion as a laccolith or series of laccoliths that predated the regional cleavage-forming event, a view supported by Green (1917). Eastwood et al. (1931) and subsequently Clark (1963) argued against these views. They noted the near vertical attitude of the contact of the granite mass across Ennerdale and the fact that it flattens out to the NE across Starling Dodd and suggested that this indicates a stock-like geometry: They further argued that the mass was affected by regional-scale thrusting and therefore must pre-date that event. They noted that the granophyre cuts folds in the metasedimentary rocks and tentatively suggested that the veins must post-date the cleavage, assuming that the latter is genetically related to the folds. However, if the folds are accepted as slump structures the basis of the argument fails. The early radiometric dates on the granite seemed to support the late Caledonian age; Brown et al. (1964) derived a whole-rock K-Ar age of 370 ± 20 Ma for the main granite, and Rundle (1979) a whole-rock Rb-Sr age of 420 ± 4 Ma. However, Hughes and Fettes (1994) concluded from thin-section studies and variations in the nature of the cleavage across the aureole that the cleavage has been imposed on the hornfels and that in consequence the intrusion pre-dates the regional deformation. This view was supported by Hughes et al. (1996) who presented a U-Pb zircon age of 452 ± 4 Ma, indicating a late Caradoc age of intrusion.
Lee (1989) interpreted the Ennerdale mass as a shallow laccolith c. 1–2 km thick overlying a denser granitic mass. Evans et al. (1994) refined this model and suggested that the mass consists of a 1100 m-thick laccolith underlain by further laccolith-style members of the Lake District batholith.
Much discussion has taken place on the basic and acid complexes (Rastall, 1906; Eastwood et al., 1931; Clark, 1963). It is generally accepted, on the basis of the complex age relationships, the transitional rock types and the confinement of the basic rocks to the margins of the mass, that there has been some form of hybridization between an early basic magmatic phase and the later granitic magma, probably by some form of metasomatic exchange. Both Clark (1963) and Millward et al. (in press) argued that the early basic phase was dioritic and that the doleritic rocks represent some form of cumulate or early differentiate.
The Ennerdale intrusion is most probably a subvolcanic intrusion emplaced in a supra-subduction zone setting as a series of two or three magmatic pulses. Locally, the host rocks were metamorphosed and hardened, and this carapace largely resisted the subsequent regional cleavage-forming events.
Conclusions
The Bowness Knott GCR site provides excellent sections through the contact of the Ennerdale intrusion and the host Skiddaw Group rocks and allows a study of the nature of the intrusion and, in particular, its age relative to the regional events.
The Ennerdale intrusion, one of the surface expressions of the Lake District batholith, is a relatively uniform, pink granite, characterized for the greater part by granophyric intergrowths and feldspar phenocrysts. Diorite phases occur within the main mass and as minor intrusions around Bowness Knott; they have locally hybridized with the slightly later granite. The hybrid rocks contain a range of rock types including the famous 'needle rock' well seen on the eastern shoulder of Bowness Knott.
The regional cleavage is only incipiently developed in the aureole of the intrusion and overprints the aureole minerals indicating that its development post-dates the intrusion. Radiometric dating suggests a late Caradoc age for the intrusion linking it with the formation of the Borrowdale Volcanic Group. Chemical characteristics of the mass are consistent with a sub-volcanic setting for its intrusion.