The Exeter Group, south Devon, England: a contribution to the early post-Variscan stratigraphy of northwest Europe
The lower part of the post-Variscan succession around Exeter, south Devon, England, comprises some 800 m of breccias, with subordinate sandstones and mudstones, which rest upon Devonian and Carboniferous rocks folded during the Variscan Orogeny and are overlain, disconformably, by the Aylesbeare Mud...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Geological magazine 1997-03, Vol.134 (2), p.177-197 |
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Zusammenfassung: | The lower part of the post-Variscan succession around Exeter,
south Devon, England, comprises some 800 m of breccias, with
subordinate sandstones and mudstones, which rest upon Devonian and
Carboniferous rocks folded during the Variscan Orogeny and are
overlain, disconformably, by the Aylesbeare Mudstone Group (Early
Triassic?). These deposits comprise the most westerly of the early
post-Variscan successions preserved onshore in northwest Europe and
lie to the south of the Variscan Deformation Front; they are assigned
to the Exeter Group (new term). Geochronological and palaeontological
studies, in conjunction with detailed geological mapping, show that
the constituent formations comprise a lower (Late
Carboniferous(?)–Early Permian) sequence separated from an
upper (Late Permian) sequence by an unconformity which represents an
hiatus with a duration of at least 20 m.y. The lower sequence
contains volcanic rocks dated at between 291 and 282 Ma (Early
Permian) and pre-dates intrusion of the nearby Dartmoor Granite (280
Ma). In the overlying, palynologically-dated, Late Permian sequence,
older breccias contain clasts of the Dartmoor Granite aureole rocks,
and younger ones contain clasts of that granite. The lower sequence
occurs mainly within the Crediton Trough, an east–west
trending, partly fault-bounded, sedimentary basin that probably
formed by extensional reactivation of a Variscan thrust. Breccias in
this sequence formed largely on alluvial fans; the common occurrence
of debris flows and a down-fan passage from gravity flows into
fluvially deposited sediments is typical of deposition on semi-arid
fans. The upper (Late Permian) sequence is more widespread but
includes similar deposits overlain, at the top of the Exeter Group,
by aeolian dune and interdune deposits. Correlation within the
laterally variable facies associations which comprise these sequences
has been achieved using a combination of sedimentary facies analysis,
sedimentary geochemistry, and petrographical and geochemical clast
typing. The stratigraphy revealed within the Exeter Group is broadly
comparable with that recognized in the early post-Variscan Rotliegend
successions elsewhere in Europe. This similarity may, however, be
deceptive; the upper part of the Exeter Group may be coeval with the
Zechstein, and apparently correlatable major unconformities in the
group and the Rotliegend may reflect different events in the Variscan
fold-belt and Variscan Foreland areas, respectively. |
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ISSN: | 0016-7568 1469-5081 |
DOI: | 10.1017/S001675689700664X |