2000
DOI: 10.1017/s0016756800003952
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Very densely welded, rheomorphic ignimbrites of homogeneous intermediate calc-alkaline composition from the English Lake District

Abstract: Within a largely concealed, caldera-related volcaniclastic succession of the Ordovician Borrowdale Volcanic Group in the western Lake District, two thick (100–350 m) ignimbrites within the Fleming Hall Formation exhibit a number of features that in combination make them unusual deposits. They are both homogeneous with comparatively low-SiO2 (63%) bulk composition, contain only a moderate crystal content, are generally poor in lithic clasts, show uniformly very dense welding (yielding parataxitic to massiv… Show more

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Cited by 12 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…The breccias resemble autobreccias of lava flows, but they pass laterally and irregularly into undisturbed, flat-lying eutaxitic ignimbrite, and the outlines of the blocks are commonly faint. Hot-state brecciation likely occurred during rheomorphic flow in the late stages of cooling, a common feature of high-grade "lava-like" ignimbrites Kokelaar 1992, 1994;Beddoe-Stephens and Millward 2000). The upper of the two rhyolitic, red, high-grade ignimbrites can be mapped continuously for ∼7 km and then traced for another ∼4.5 km as a single layer of 2-3 m blocks within boulder breccia-conglomerates of the fault-proximal sub-basin.…”
Section: Rhyolitic Ignimbritesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The breccias resemble autobreccias of lava flows, but they pass laterally and irregularly into undisturbed, flat-lying eutaxitic ignimbrite, and the outlines of the blocks are commonly faint. Hot-state brecciation likely occurred during rheomorphic flow in the late stages of cooling, a common feature of high-grade "lava-like" ignimbrites Kokelaar 1992, 1994;Beddoe-Stephens and Millward 2000). The upper of the two rhyolitic, red, high-grade ignimbrites can be mapped continuously for ∼7 km and then traced for another ∼4.5 km as a single layer of 2-3 m blocks within boulder breccia-conglomerates of the fault-proximal sub-basin.…”
Section: Rhyolitic Ignimbritesmentioning
confidence: 99%