Mendum, J.R., Barber, A.J., Butler, R.W.H., Flinn, D., Goodenough, K.M., Krabbendam, M., Park, R.G. & Stewart, A.D. 2009. Lewisian, Torridonian and Moine Rocks of Scotland, Geological Conservation Review Series No. 34, JNCC, Peterborough. 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
Avernish
A.J. Barber
Introduction
The 2 km coastal section at Avernish on the northern shore of Loch Alsh exposes a section through part of the Western Unit of the Glenelg–Attadale Lewisianoid Inlier including its western contact with highly deformed Moine semipelite and metaconglomerate
B.N. Peach and J. Horne mapped the Avernish area during the primary geological survey of the Glenelg district (Geological Survey of Scotland, 1909). A brief account of the 'Western Lewisian' (now termed the 'Western Unit') and of the metaconglomerate, described as 'pseudo-conglomerate', is given in Peach et al. (1910). At this time the Moine outcrop was not recognized. Barber (1968) subsequently mapped this southern part of Lochalsh in detail, and Thomas (1973) carried out a reconnaissance geochemical study of the Western Lewisian, including the outcrop of Moine semipelite at Avernish. The lithology and structure of Avernish and surrounding area is further described in Barber and May (1976) and Barber et al. (1978), which form the basis of this account.
Description
Avernish is an area of low hills in the southern part of Lochalsh, situated south of Auchtertyre. The GCR site lies on the west side of the two-pronged peninsula on the north shore of Loch Alsh
At Avernish, gneisses of the Western Unit consist of hornblende- and biotite-bearing felsic gneisses and massive amphibolitic' mafic bodies. The gneisses have a coarse layered structure with felsic layers containing 5 mm plagioclase porphyroblasts, alternating with thin hornblende-or biotite-rich layers. The layers are lenticular and are rarely traceable for more than a few metres along strike. Mafic pods or lenses, from metres to tens of metres across, are enclosed by the felsic gneisses, which also form screens between adjacent mafic bodies. Contacts between felsic gneisses and amphibolite are generally gradational. Typically, the amphibolite has a black and white speckled appearance, but is locally foliated. It is composed predominantly of hornblende, plagioclase and epidote. In thin section, both felsic gneisses and amphibolites show relict coarse-grained textures, with replacement of pyroxene by amphibole, garnets partially replaced by biotite and epidote, and exsolution of epidote in plagioclase. These textures show that the mafic bodies were metamorphosed initially under granulite-facies conditions, but have subsequently been retrogressed to amphibolite facies (Barber and May, 1976). The gneisses also commonly contain small pods of homblendite derived from ultramafic rocks.
The foliation in the gneisses dips mainly towards the east or south-east, but is deflected around mafic pods. A prominent SE-plunging lineation, defined by mineral aggregates is commonly developed, but in places, a later fine mineral lineation, plunging to the ESE, is also seen. Locally, the gneisses are cut by gently ESE-dipping shear-zones, marked by development of a platy foliation and a more-intense ESE-plunging lineation, for example along the shore section to the west of Avernish House
However, the greater part of the Avernish shore section shows little evidence of Caledonian deformation and evidently represents the relatively undeformed core of the inlier, comparable to the Eilean Chlamail–Camas nan Ceann GCR site on Loch Hourn. This comparison is reinforced by the common occurrence of 'newer' mafic dykes (cf. Ramsay, 1957b), for example west of Avernish House
Important exposures occur on the shore platform and in the low cliffs surrounding Rhu Scalvaig
On the western side of Rhu Scalvaig, the gneissose Moine semipelite is underlain by schistose metaconglomerate that contains thin (c. 30 cm) psammite units. The matrix of the conglomerate is dominated by actinolite, biotite and chlorite, but the abundant clasts include: lenticular blocks of layered quartzofeldspathic gneiss, up to 1 m across; rounded blocks of homblendic rock; and irregular twisted masses of vein quartz. The schistosity is commonly folded and the crests of the folds are filled by vein quartz and calcite. SE-dipping extensional shear bands are also developed. In thin section, actinolite, biotite and chlorite define the foliation, which encloses augen of relict hornblende, plagioclase and epidote. Clasts of amphibolite and hornblendic rocks are surrounded by radiating aggregates of actinolite needles, suggesting that the schistose matrix was formed, at least in part, from the breakdown of the clasts. Horne (in Peach et al., 1910) interpreted these outcrops as 'crush conglomerate' or 'pseudo-conglomerate', formed tectonically by the shearing and disruption of hornblendic Lewisianoid gneiss. However, the rocks resemble the Moine metaconglomerate described at the Attadale and Allt Cracaig Coast GCR sites, and the close relationship with typical Moine psammites and semipelites indicates that they represent a basal metaconglomerate of the Moine.
North of Rhu Scalvaig
Interpretation
The metaconglomerate at the base of the Moine succession at Avernish indicates that the Moine rocks were deposited unconformably upon Lewisianoid gneiss basement. The effects of Caledonian (and possibly Knoydartian) deformation and metamorphic events on both rock groups can be clearly demonstrated in the narrow outcrop of Moine semipelite and psammite by Rhu Scalvaig. Here, the foliations in the Moine and adjacent Lewisianoid rocks are coplanar, effectively eliminating any original stratigraphical discordance. This deformation also resulted in the tight to isoclinal interfolding of the Lewisianoid basement and its Moine sedimentary cover seen in the Glenelg–Attadale Inlier (see for instance the Rubha Camas na Caillin GCR site report, this chapter). Garnets in the Moine semipelite indicate that deformation took place under amphibolite-facies metamorphic conditions.
Z-profile folds, with a strong axial rodding lineation that plunges to the east, fold the foliation in both the Lewisianoid and Moine rocks. These folds are correlated with the Beinn a' Chapuill phase of folding (see Beinn a' Chapuill GCR site report, this chapter), the second major phase of folding to affect the Moine rocks in the Glenelg area (Ramsay, 1957b). A subsequent post-tectonic amphibolite-facies metamorphic event is indicated by the development of the hornblende porphyroblasts that cut across the folded rocks and associated rodding.
The final phase of deformation on the Avernish peninsula is the local shearing of biotite pseudomorphs after hornblende, resulting in platy zones with a strong south-easterly mineral lineation. This last phase is correlated with the formation of mylonites, the earliest structural event recognized in the Moine Thrust Belt, immediately to the west (Barber, 1965). When the evidence at Avernish is compared to that of the Ard Hill GCR site (Chapter 5), it is clear here that events in the Moine Thrust Belt are later than the main penetrative folding and metamorphism of the Moine and Lewisianoid rocks in the Glenelg–Attadale Inlier and farther east in the orogen. High-grade amphibolite-facies rocks from the interior of the orogen have been tectonically juxtaposed against greenschist-facies rocks of the Moine Thrust Belt during a late stage in the Caledonian Orogeny.
Lewisianoid gneisses and amphibolites in the eastern part of Avernish peninsula show coarse-grained textures and cross-cutting dyke relationships, which indicate that these rocks, in the central part of the Western Unit of the Glenelg–Attadale Inlier, were relatively unaffected by deformation during the Caledonian Orogeny. Caledonian effects are only evident in rocks immediately adjacent to the Moine outcrop, or in localized shear-zones, where the gneisses develop a strong platy foliation, reclined folds and an ESE mineral lineation.
Conclusions
The occurrence of Moine semipelite and psammite at the Avernish GCR site, associated with a basal metaconglomerate containing clasts of the adjacent Western Unit of the Glenelg–Attadale Lewisianoid Inlier, confirms the original unconformable relationships between the Moine succession and the basement Lewisianoid gneisses. However, the parallel interlayering of the Moine and Lewisianoid rocks demonstrates that the two rock groups were both strongly deformed and tightly folded during the Caledonian Orogeny and possibly during the earlier Neoproterozoic Knoydartian event (cf. Rubha Camas na Cailinn GCR site report, this chapter). Localized mylonitic deformation in the Lewisianoid gneisses, the latest event in the tectonic history of the Glenelg–Attadale Inlier, is correlated with the earliest structural event in the Moine Thrust Belt. Hence, Caledonian deformation in the Moine Thrust Belt occurred significantly later than in the interior of the orogen. In contrast, outcrops of Lewisianoid gneisses and amphibolites to the east of Rhu Scalvaig demonstrate that the central parts of the Glenelg–Attadale Lewisianoid Inlier were little affected by Caledonian deformation. Here, the original Archaean and Palaeoproterozoic relationships are still largely preserved.
The Avernish GCR site is of national importance, as it demonstrates the critical relationships between Lewisianoid basement inliers and their Moine cover, and enables the sequence of structural and metamorphic events in the interior of the orogen to be compared with that in the Moine Thrust Belt.