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
Side Pike
M.J. Branney
Introduction
Well-preserved subaerial pyroclastic successions in the ancient geological record are rare worldwide, largely because they are lost by erosion. The Side Pike GCR site contains possibly the best example in Britain of an ancient subaerial volcanic succession that exhibits in close association the three main categories of pyroclastic deposit: surge, flow and fallout deposits. It also records the three principal types of volcanic explosion, magmatic, phreatomagmatic and phreatic, and it also includes features that are interpreted to have resulted from a rootless explosion caused by the interaction of surface water with hot welded ignimbrite. Post-eruption volcaniclastic sedimentary deposits are represented by debris-flow breccias and aqueous volcaniclastic siltstones and sandstones, belonging to the Seathwaite Fell Formation.
Evidence for volcanotectonic faulting closely associated with caldera volcanism is also well preserved in this site. Large vertical syn-eruptive displacements are indicated by structures on fault planes and by abrupt thickness changes in pyroclastic and sedimentary units across the faults. The most intensely fractured part of the Scafell Caldera broke into blocks 10–1000 m in size; the resulting chaotic megabreccia covers an area of more than 5 km2, and is known as the Side Pike Complex. Megabreccia is a characteristic feature of large calderas throughout the world (e.g. in the San Juan mountains, Colorado; Lipman, 1984), and represents caldera floor and/or wall rocks that fragmented as a result of caldera collapse. Side Pike forms a megablock, 500 m across, that lies near the eastern margin of the megabreccia.
The rocks of Side Pike were described first by Branney (1988a, 1988b, 1990b), and Branney and Kokelaar (1994a).
Description
Side Pike is a small glaciated peak on the south side of Great Langdale. Strata generally dip about 25° to the east and are intensely faulted
The vitric ash at the top of the ignimbrite forms a prominent grassy ledge. Above this lie 1–2 m of cross-bedded, fine to coarse tuff (D of
A diverse succession of fallout deposits, ignimbrites and aqueously deposited bedded volcaniclastic sedimentary rocks (F of
Between the andesite sheets lies the Lingmoor Tuff, a thinly bedded fine tuff with abundant accretionary lapilli
Vertical and deformed fiamme occur in eutaxitic lapilli-tuffs in the immediate vicinity of NNE-trending faults in the saddle between Side Pike and Lingmoor Fell
Interpretation
The lowest part of the succession in the GCR site illustrates the distinction between the varieties of pyroclastic deposit and also the characteristic types of volcanic eruption. The silicic tuff (B of
Further pyroclastic eruptions and aqueous reworking were followed by the phreatomagmatic eruption of the Lingmoor Tuff. This is important stratigraphically because it has been correlated widely around the western part of the Borrowdale Volcanic Group outcrop. It lies within the upper part of the Seathwaite Fell Formation. The facies association resembles that of the Neapolitan Yellow Tuff of the Campanian region of Italy, which was erupted from beneath the Bay of Naples (Scarpati et al., 1993), and a broadly similar style of eruption is possible. Abrupt lateral facies variations across the NNE-trending volcanotectonic faults east of Side Pike indicate that the faults were active and influencing the local palaeogeography at the time of the eruption.
At Side Pike there is little evidence diagnostic of either an intrusive or an extrusive origin for the andesite sheets that occur within the bedded succession. However, their stratigraphical positions coincide with two andesite sheets on Lingmoor Fell
The precise origin of the large-scale brecciation of the Side Pike Complex is not known. There appears to have been more than one phase of early fracturing, characterized by soft-state styles of deformation. The megablocks contain coherent to intensely deformed successions, some of which correlate with the Scafell caldera-floor and caldera-fill successions. However, several megablocks have 'exotic' volcanic sequences of unknown provenance, even though these may, in some cases, be correlated from one megablock to another (Branney, 1988b). The subaerial pyroclastic succession on Side Pike correlates with the successions seen in several other megablocks on Wrynose Fell, just to the SW, but this succession has not been recognized outside the Side Pike Complex; thus its precise stratigraphical position in the Borrowdale Volcanic Group remains uncertain. However, uppermost units in the Side Pike megablock are thought to correlate with the upper part of the Seathwaite Fell Formation, which is the record of a lake that filled the Scafell Caldera after it subsided (see Langdale Pikes GCR site).
Conclusions
The Side Pike GCR site is part of a breccia that is exposed over more than 5 km2. The breccia comprises enormous blocks and is associated with the formation of the Scafell Caldera. The facies association at Side Pike is diagnostic of a subaerial environment and its discovery was influential in determining the overall non-marine character of the Borrowdale Volcanic Group. This is in contrast, for example, with the island volcano setting of Caradoc rocks in North Wales (see Chapter 6). Side Pike is a rare site in the ancient geological record that exhibits the three main categories of pyroclastic rock: fallout, surge and flow deposits in close association. It also includes superb, rare examples of an ash-fall deposit associated with ignimbrite and the record of rootless steam explosions that occurred shortly after an ignimbrite eruption, while the ash deposits were still hot. Though secondary explosions of this type are well known at modern volcanoes, such as following the recent ignimbrite eruptions of Mount St Helens (USA) and Mount Pinatubo (Philippines), such clear evidence from Lower Palaeozoic rocks is rare. Side Pike also provides excellent evidence for differential ground subsidence along faults generated during volcanism which are now exposed in cross section.