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The Geology of Ireland Part Two. Main Tectonic Zones & Granites Galway Granite Leinster Granite Donegal Granite.

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Presentation on theme: "The Geology of Ireland Part Two. Main Tectonic Zones & Granites Galway Granite Leinster Granite Donegal Granite."— Presentation transcript:

1 The Geology of Ireland Part Two

2 Main Tectonic Zones & Granites Galway Granite Leinster Granite Donegal Granite

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4 Tectonic Environments of Granites Ocean Ridge Granites (ORG) Volcanic-Arc Granites Collisional Granites (COLG) –Syn-tectonic granites associated with continent-continent collision –Post-tectonic granites associated with continent-continent collision –Syn-tectonic granites associated with continent-arc collision Within-Plate Granites (WPG)

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6 The Caledonian orogeny

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44 Crustal Melting & Granite Magmas Partial Melting Segregation Aggregation Ascent Emplacement

45 Protoliths & Partial Melting Typical geothermal gradients of 20°C/km do not generate temps >800°C at 35 km depth required to melt most crustal rocks (Thompson 1999). Three main factors in inducing partial melting: –Increase in temperature –Decrease in pressure (adiabatic decompression) –Introduce H2O-rich volatiles –One or more of these may be met by the influence of proximal mantle-derived basaltic magmas

46 Partial Melting & Melt Segregation Image source: www.indiana.edu Melt segregation is the separation of the melt fraction from its restite and source during partial melting Melt segregation depends on the permeability of the source. Melts first forms at grain boundaries between mineral phases

47 Protoliths & Melt Composition Small degrees of partial melting of an amphibolite will produce a Si-rich melt. Granitic melts can be produced from a mafic protolith

48 Granite Mineralogy

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50 Mafic Enclaves Close-up view of the Drogheda Granite with mafic enclaves (www.gsi.ie)

51 Mafic Enclaves

52 Magma Mixing & Mingling Galway Granite (www.gsi.ie)

53 Mafic Felsic Magma Interaction

54 Magma Mixing and Mingling

55 Porphyry Deposits Mineralisation associated with porphyritic intrusive rocks Ore occurs as disseminations along hairline fractures as well as within larger veins, which often form a stockwork The orebodies typically contain between 0.4 and 1 % copper with smaller amounts of other metals such as molybdenum, silver and gold They are formed when large quantities of hydrothermal fluids carrying small quantities of metals pass through fractured rock within and around the intrusive and deposit the metals

56 Mineralisation Fluorite mineralisation Molybdenite mineralisation


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