Another relatively rare
form of non-igneous intrusion is represented by the 'Sudbury breccias'
associated with the Sudbury meteorite impact structure here in
Ontario. The 'breccias' - should they be called 'impactite injectites? - form
sheets, dikes, diapirs, and irregular masses of fluidized
Paleoproterozoic (Huronian) sedimentary material, and can be found at
least 100 km out from the supposed impact centre. The Huronian is also the
home of the well known Espanola clastic dike exhibiting a 'Bernoulli'
concentration of clasts in the centre of the dike. These silt/mud
intrusions (injectites) transect kilometre-size recumbent fold structures
in sandstone units below the Gowganda glacial unit - a nice example of
large-scale non-tectonic folding and non-igneous injection material!
The sand filled cracks referred to by Eric used to be
known in my days in the Trias-Lias of Glamorgan as Neptunian dykes, and, I would
tend to believe, are distinct from sedimentary 'injectites' .
Re- Christine's query, I have a
recollection that there are Neptunian dikes in Adirondack gniesses below
their contact with the Potsadam sandstone in northern New York State, but I
would have to confirm that, or have someone confirm it for me!
Rgds to all , Bill Church
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Thursday, November 26, 2009 5:11
AM
Subject: Re: Anderson Stress Meeting: September
2010 reminder
Dear Eric
I have no particular stand on the terminology for
igneous rocks, but you are incorrect in your assertions on the scale of
sedimentary intrusions. Salt is a sedimentary rock which can be injected
through kilometers of strata in bodies hundreds of metres to kilometers
across. Anyone who has ever worked on deltas can point to mud diapirism on
a similar scale. Even the humble sand injection feature is much larger
than you make out; your description seems to be of sand filling pre-existing
cracks, whereas most sand injections are of a fluid slurry under pressure.
These intrusions can be huge. In the Mesozoic forearc basin of the
Antarctic Peninsula, sandstone dykes have been mapped with MINIMUM dimensions: 6
km long, cutting 350 m of strata, and 1 m wide. For more examples, see,
among other papers:
Hurst A. & Cartwright J. A. Eds. 2007. Sand
Injectites: Implications for hydrocarbon exploration and production.
Memoir 87 American Association of Petroleum Geologists
Hurst A.,
Cartwright J. & Duranti D. 2003. Fluidization structures in
produced by upward injection of sand through a sealing lithology. In:
Subsurface sediment mobilization (eds. Van Rensbergen P.,Hillis R.,Maltman A. J.
& Morley,C.K.), Geological Society Of London, London,
123-127
Jonk R., Hurst A., Duranti D., Mazzini A., Fallick A. E.
& Parnell J. 2005.The origin and timing of sand injection, petroleum
migration and diagenesis: the Tertiary petroleum system of the South Viking
Graben, North Sea. AAPG Bulletin, 89, 329-357
Hurst A.
& Duranti D. 2004. Fluidisation and injection in the deep-water
sandstones of the Eocene Alba Formation (UK North Sea). Sedimentology,
51, 3, 503-529
Hope this helps
David
Macdonald
-----Original Message-----
From: Tectonics & structural
geology discussion list [mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of Eric
Essene
Sent: 26 November 2009 07:39
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: Re: Anderson Stress Meeting: September 2010
reminder
Rob,
The term igneous intrusions is
functionally a terrible term, a
distinction without a difference. More
than 99.9% (or more?) of the
time it means igneous rocks where the term is
redundant. If one talks
about sedimentary intrusions it is on a meter
scale feature, commonly
even less--I have seen some down to cm scale.
When they formed and
well afterward they did not look like dikes, just
fractures filled
with loose sediment. I discount the poor term
"sandstone dikes" as
needing yet another confusing
term.
On the other hand salt domes are metamorphic
(recrystallized) but
not molten rock, well a little brine. They were
not in the
sedimentary group during formation. Yes, we have diapirs
of
metamorphic rock, although a lot of those gneiss domes probably have
a
little melt. I would agree about metamorphic diapirs but simply
would
not call them metamorphic intrusions to avoid confusion on
a
transitional rock. Gneiss domes are a nice description for
them.
It must be exceedingly rare for igneous
petrologists/geochemists
to be presenting data on "sand dikes".
Salt domes are much larger
but are as they form. Do you know of any igneous
petrologist/
geochemist who would report on them in your symposium? So
"sandstone
dikes" are fractures filled with loose clastic material and
water,
salt diapirs are all metamorphic and may have brine, gneiss domes
are
often partial melts then at least partly igneous, and the
term
"igneous intrusion" is clearly redundant to the average passerby.
Is
this really a useful terminology?
cheers,
eric
On Nov 26,
2009, at 12:17 AM, Butler, Robert wrote:
> Eric
> Actually -
there are lots of non-igenous intrusions in basins -
> sandstone dykes
through 100s metres of strata. Not to mention mud
> diapirs, salt etc
etc.... gas chimneys....
> go google!
> Cheers
>
Rob
>
> ________________________________________
> From:
Tectonics & structural geology discussion list
[[log in to unmask]
> ] On Behalf Of Eric Essene
[[log in to unmask]]
> Sent: 26 November 2009 05:09
> To: [log in to unmask]
> Subject: Re: Anderson Stress Meeting: September 2010
reminder
>
> Rob, Zoe, and all,
> Igneous
intrusions as opposed to all those sedimentary plutons?
> The phrase is
nearly always meaningless and should not be used.
>
Sounds like a great trip.
> cheers,
>
eric
>
>
> On Nov 25, 2009, at 11:28 PM, Butler, Robert
wrote:
>
>> Dear all
>> As we get our diaries together
for 2010 we thought it timely to
>> remind you of the conference next
year:
>>
>> Stress controls on faulting, fracturing and
igneous intrusion in the
>> Earth's crust
>>
>> A
meeting to commemorate the work of Ernest Masson Anderson on the
>>
50th anniversary of his death.
>>
>> 6-8 September 2010 at the
University of Glasgow, UK
>>
>> Organisers: Zoe Shipton, Rick
Sibson, Dave Healy, Rob Butler
>>
>> We will send out details
of the meeting ("First Circular") in
>> January -
>> Abstract
deadline will be end April with a preliminary programme
>> drawn up
through May.
>> We are also planning a fieldtrip to the Hebrides and NW
Scotland to
>> examine a variety of faults and the Tertiary igneous
complexes.
>> Again - further information will be included in the first
circular.
>>
>> Hope to see a bunch of you in Scotland next
September!
>> Zoe, Rick, Dave and
Rob.
>>
>>
>> The University of Aberdeen is a charity
registered in Scotland, No
>>
SC013683..
>>
>>
>
>
> The University of
Aberdeen is a charity registered in Scotland, No
>
SC013683..
>
>
The University of Aberdeen is a charity
registered in Scotland, No SC013683.