Borrowdale Volcanic Group | |
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Stratigraphic range: Caradocian (late Ordovician) | |
Type | Group |
Sub-units | Birker Fell Andesite Formation, Whorneyside Tuff Formation, Airy's Bridge Tuff Formation, Lingwell Tuff Formation, Seathwaite Fell Sandstone Formation, Lincomb Tarns Tuff Formation, Esk Pike Formation, Tarn Hows Tuff Formation |
Underlies | Windermere Supergroup |
Overlies | Skiddaw Group |
Thickness | probably up to 6000m |
Lithology | |
Primary | volcanic rocks |
Other | siltstone, sandstone |
Location | |
Region | Cumbria |
Country | England |
Extent | Central Lake District & Cross Fell |
Type section | |
Named for | Borrowdale |
The Borrowdale Volcanic Group is a group of igneous rock formations named after the Borrowdale area of the Lake District, in England. They are Caradocian (late Ordovician) in age (roughly 450 million years old).[1] It is thought that they represent the remains of a volcanic island arc, approximately similar to the island arcs of the west Pacific today. This developed as oceanic crust to the (present) north-west and was forced by crustal movement under a continental land-mass to the present south-east. Such forcing under, as two plates meet, is termed subduction. This land-mass has been named Avalonia by geologists. It is now incorporated into England and Wales and a sliver of North America.