The Crummock Water aureole, an ENE-trending elongate zone of bleached and recrystallized Skiddaw Group rocks, 24 km in length and up to 3 km wide, is a zone in which pervasive metasomatism has modified the composition of the dominantly siltstone and mudstone lithologies. The bleached rocks show a substantial net gain of As, B, K and Rb and loss of Cl, Ni, S, Zn, H
2
O and C. Carbon loss is responsible for the bleaching. There are smaller and more localized net losses of Cu, Fe, Li and Mn, and gains of Ca, F and Si, whilst Co, Pb and REE are at least locally redistributed. Many chalcophile elements show evidence of initial widespread depletion and subsequent local enrichment.
The mineralogy of the rocks is little affected by the geochemical changes. Like their counterparts outside of the bleached zone, the metasomatized rocks consist essentially of quartz, chlorite, muscovite, paragonite and rutile. Small aggregates and porphyroblasts of white mica and chlorite are developed. The metasomatism, which was accompanied by tourmaline veining, is superimposed on a contact metamorphic event. It post-dates the main Caledonian cleavage but pre-dates late Caledonian minor folds.
Rb-Sr whole rock isochrons suggest that the metasomatic event occurred at
c.
400 Ma and was thus associated with the Lower Devonian Shap-Skiddaw granite magmatism and not the earlier Eskdale Granite or Ennerdale Granophyre magmatic events. Modelling of Bouguer anomalies indicates that geological and geochemical constraints are most simply satisfied if the metasomatism is attributed to a buried, elongate, highly evolved granitic body intruded along the northern margin of a major granitic-granodioritic component of the Lake District batholith. The bleached zone is associated with a major lineament, which may reflect basement control on the location and form of the buried intrusion. Loss of metals from the bleached rocks is related to penecontemporaneous and subsequent hydrothermal vein mineralization and demonstrates that Skiddaw Group sedimentary rocks were a source of ore metals in the Lake District.
Millimetric, ellipsoidal monazite nodules found within Lower Palaeozoic sedimentary rocks in Wales, south-west England and Brittany are characterised by a pronounced zonation of light and heavy REE, an inclusion fabric of low-grade metamorphic minerals indistinguishable from the host rock and a low Th content. They are interpreted as the product of in situ recrystallization of detrital monazites derived from pegmatitic or granitic source rocks and are potentially useful as indicators of Lower Palaeozoic sedimentary rock provenance.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.