1999
DOI: 10.1144/gsjgs.156.2.0301
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Mid-Caradoc magmatism in central Llyn, rhyolite petrogenesis, and the evolution of the Snowdonia volcanic corridor in NW Wales

Abstract: Ordovician arc magmatism in the Welsh Basin culminated in the development of a NE-SW corridor of intense volcanism extending for > 65 km in northwest Wales from Conwy through Snowdonia to Llanbedrog in the central Llŷn Peninsula. New data from central Llŷn reveal four eruptive phases: Llŷn Phase 1 produced up to 800 m of subalkaline rhyolites and acid ash-flow tuffs (Pen-ychain Rhyolitic Complex), interpreted as the SW margin of the Llwyd Mawr/Pitts Head caldera. The Complex thins rapidly westwards from the… Show more

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Cited by 4 publications
(8 citation statements)
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“…The best geochemical match for the Ardleigh clast is provided by the mid-Ordovician (Caradoc) volcanic rocks of Wales, for which analytical data has been published for the outcrops in Snowdonia (Thorpe et al, 1993), Llŷn (Gibbons and Young, 1999) and SW Wales (Bevins et al, 1991). Snowdonia rhyolites studied by Thorpe et al (1993) are considered to have subalkaline affinities, although for the Llŷn suites a wide variation in alkalies content was demonstrated by Gibbons and Young (1999). On immobile trace element variation diagrams, the Welsh volcanic rocks follow a number of separate crystallisation paths, as shown by the Nb/Zr distributions in Fig.…”
Section: Provenance Of the Clastmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The best geochemical match for the Ardleigh clast is provided by the mid-Ordovician (Caradoc) volcanic rocks of Wales, for which analytical data has been published for the outcrops in Snowdonia (Thorpe et al, 1993), Llŷn (Gibbons and Young, 1999) and SW Wales (Bevins et al, 1991). Snowdonia rhyolites studied by Thorpe et al (1993) are considered to have subalkaline affinities, although for the Llŷn suites a wide variation in alkalies content was demonstrated by Gibbons and Young (1999). On immobile trace element variation diagrams, the Welsh volcanic rocks follow a number of separate crystallisation paths, as shown by the Nb/Zr distributions in Fig.…”
Section: Provenance Of the Clastmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A comprehensive comparative survey of other trace element abundances has not been attempted but it is noted, for example, that most Lake District volcanic rocks have La/Nb ratios greater than the value of 1.0 for the Ardleigh clast. The best geochemical match for the Ardleigh clast is provided by the mid-Ordovician (Caradoc) volcanic rocks of Wales, for which analytical data has been published for the outcrops in Snowdonia (Thorpe et al, 1993), Llŷn (Gibbons and Young, 1999) and SW Wales (Bevins et al, 1991). Snowdonia rhyolites studied by Thorpe et al (1993) are considered to have subalkaline affinities, although for the Llŷn suites a wide variation in alkalies content was demonstrated by Gibbons and Young (1999).…”
Section: Provenance Of the Clastmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…2). Thick (locally > 500 m) rhyolitic ash flow tuff sequences were erupted from the calderas into a shallow marine and locally subaerial environment ( Howells et al ., 1991 ; Gibbons and Young, 1999). These rhyolitic products are sometimes intercalated with, and were commonly followed by, basaltic effusions leaking up bounding faults and constructing transient Strombolian cones and trough‐accumulations of submarine lavas ( Fig.…”
Section: Snowdonia Volcanic Corridormentioning
confidence: 99%
“…2). All this volcanicity was restricted not only in space but also in time: eruptions took place over just a few (?2–4) million years inside the span of three mid‐Caradoc stages (Soudleyan, Longvillian, Woolstonian) and two graptolite zones ( Dicranograptus clingani and Diplograptus multidens ) ( Gibbons and Young, 1999). Abrupt cessation of magmatism occurred in Woolstonian times and black graptolitic mud covered the subsiding, extinct volcanic centres.…”
Section: Snowdonia Volcanic Corridormentioning
confidence: 99%
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