University of Exeter
Browse

The Mesoproterozoic Stac Fada proximal ejecta blanket, NW Scotland: constraints on crater location from field observations, anisotropy of magnetic susceptibility, petrography and geochemistry

Download (3.09 MB)
journal contribution
posted on 2025-08-01, 00:50 authored by K Amor, SP Hesselbo, D Porcelli, A Price, N Saunders, MA Sykes, J Taylor, C MacNiocaill
The Stac Fada Member of the Mesoproterozoic Stoer Group (Torridon Supergroup) in NW Scotland is a proximal ejecta blanket surrounding an unidentified asteroid impact crater. A combination of field observations of the ejecta deposit and underlying strata, the geographical distribution of terrane-identified basement clasts found embedded in the impactite, and anisotropy of magnetic susceptibility of the impact melt rocks at different locations, can constrain the crater location to be about 15-20 km WNW of Enard Bay and thus buried under Mesozoic sediments in The Minch. Syn-compressional structures within the suevite at Stattic Point give a clear indication of a south-easterly direction of mass motion. The signatures of two different terranes within the Lewisian gneiss help identify the origin of clasts found in the impactite at three locations. These clasts are un-shocked and interpreted as having been swept up by the density current post-impact; their geographic distribution provides an important clue to ejecta emplacement pathways crossing the Assynt and Gruinard terranes. Anisotropy of magnetic susceptibility is used to measure flow direction in pyroclastic density current deposits and is applied here to derive a direction of motion for the impactoclastic density current. It provides good agreement with the other independent methods.

History

Rights

Copyright © 2019 Geological Society of London. All rights reserved.

Notes

This is the author accepted manuscript.

Journal

Journal of the Geological Society, London

Publisher

Geological Society Publishing House

Version

  • Accepted Manuscript

Language

en

FCD date

2019-06-14T10:41:19Z

FOA date

2020-06-09T23:00:00Z

Department

  • Archive

Usage metrics

    University of Exeter

    Categories

    No categories selected

    Keywords

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC