Relationships between the Loch Ailsh and Borralan alkaline intrusions and thrusting in the Moine Thrust zone, southern Assynt culmination, NW Scotland
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Published:January 01, 2010
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CiteCitation
M. P. Searle, R. D. Law, J. F. Dewey, M. J. Streule, 2010. "Relationships between the Loch Ailsh and Borralan alkaline intrusions and thrusting in the Moine Thrust zone, southern Assynt culmination, NW Scotland", Continental Tectonics and Mountain Building: The Legacy of Peach and Horne, R. D. Law, R. W. H. Butler, R. E. Holdsworth, M. Krabbendam, R. A. Strachan
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Abstract
The Moine Thrust zone of NW Scotland marks the Caledonian orogenic front and in the Assynt region consists of several west-vergent major thrust sheets (Moine, Ben More, Glencoul and Sole Thrust sheets) that place allochthonous rocks onto the Lewisian basement and Torridon Group cover in the west. Here we present two new balanced and restored sections across the Moine Thrust zone in the region of the Loch Ailsh and Loch Borralan alkali intrusions. Syenites and alkaline pyroxenites intrude up to Durness Group carbonates. Syenites are interpreted as cut by the Moine and Ben More Thrusts and therefore their intrusion...
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Continental Tectonics and Mountain Building: The Legacy of Peach and Horne

The world's mountain ranges are the clearest manifestations of long-term deformation of the continental crust. As such they have attracted geological investigations for centuries. Throughout this long history of research a few keynote publications stand out. One of the most important is the Geological Survey's 1907 Memoir on The Geological Structure of the North-West Highlands of Scotland. The Memoir summarized some of the Geological Survey's finest work, and outlined many of the principles of field-based structural and tectonic analysis that have subsequently guided generations of geologists working in other mountain belts, both ancient and modern. The thematic set of 32 papers in this Special Publication celebrate the 100th anniversary of the 1907 Memoir by placing the original findings in both historical and modern contexts, and juxtaposing them against present-day studies of deformation processes operating not only in the NW Highlands, but also in other mountain belts.