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Ryan, Paul D., Archer, Jean B. (1977) The South Mayo Trough: a possible Ordovician Gulf of California-type marginal basin in the west of Ireland. Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences, 14 (11) 2453-2461 doi:10.1139/e77-213

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Reference TypeJournal (article/letter/editorial)
TitleThe South Mayo Trough: a possible Ordovician Gulf of California-type marginal basin in the west of Ireland
JournalCanadian Journal of Earth Sciences
AuthorsRyan, Paul D.Author
Archer, Jean B.Author
Year1977 (November 1)Volume14
Issue11
PublisherCanadian Science Publishing
DOIdoi:10.1139/e77-213Search in ResearchGate
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Mindat Ref. ID475112Long-form Identifiermindat:1:5:475112:4
GUID0
Full ReferenceRyan, Paul D., Archer, Jean B. (1977) The South Mayo Trough: a possible Ordovician Gulf of California-type marginal basin in the west of Ireland. Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences, 14 (11) 2453-2461 doi:10.1139/e77-213
Plain TextRyan, Paul D., Archer, Jean B. (1977) The South Mayo Trough: a possible Ordovician Gulf of California-type marginal basin in the west of Ireland. Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences, 14 (11) 2453-2461 doi:10.1139/e77-213
In(1977, November) Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences Vol. 14 (11) Canadian Science Publishing
Abstract/Notes The South Mayo Trough, an early Ordovician sedimentary basin, was developed at the southern margin of the Laurentian plate. It controlled deposition of 12.8 km of sediment. Basic vulcanism accompanied the opening of the trough. This was followed by the deposition of turbidites and finally of fluvio-deltaic sediments. Initial island arc vulcanism was replaced by a bimodal basalt–rhyolite suite during sedimentation. The trough was bounded to the north and south by metamorphic source areas, of which the southerly, the Connemara Cordillera, was the more important. The Connemara Cordillera, comprised of Dalradian continental margin sediments, was deformed and metamorphosed before the trough's formation. Uplift and erosion of Connemara, opening of the trough, and change in vulcanism all occurred during late Tremadoc – early Arenig times. These events are related to the collision of the Iapetus ridge with a trench to the south of Connemara, which initiated a Gulf of California-type marginal basin, the South Mayo Trough. Comparisons between the morphology and sedimentary history of the trough with that of the Gulf of California and the geology of their adjacent source areas support this hypothesis.


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