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The use of high-resolution stratigraphy and derived lithoclasts to document structural inversion; a case study from the Paleogene, Isle of Wight, U.K.

View ORCID ProfileAndy Gale
Journal of the Geological Society, https://doi.org/10.1144/jgs2020-156
Andy Gale
1School of the Environment, Geography and Geological Sciences, University of Portsmouth, Burnaby Building, Burnaby Road, Portsmouth PO13QL UK
2Earth Science Department, The Natural History Museum, Cromwell Road, London SW75BD, UK
Roles: [Conceptualization (Lead)], [Project administration (Lead)], [Writing – original draft (Lead)]
  • Find this author on Google Scholar
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  • ORCID record for Andy Gale
  • For correspondence: andy.gale@port.ac.uk
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Abstract

The effects of structural inversion, generated by the Pyrenean Orogeny on the southerly bounding faults of the Hampshire Basin (Needles and Sandown Faults) on Eocene sedimentation in the adjacent regions were studied in outcrops by sedimentary logging, dip records and the identification of lithoclasts reworked from the crests of anticlines generated during inversion. The duration and precise age of hiatuses associated with inversion was identified using bio- and magnetostratigraphy, in comparison with the Geologic Time Scale 2020. The succession on the northern limb of the Sandown Anticline (Whitecliff Bay) includes five hiatuses of varying durations which together formed a progressive unconformity developed during the Lutetian to Priabonian interval (35-47Ma). Syn-inversion deposits thicken southwards towards the southern margin of the Hampshire Basin and are erosionally truncated by unconformities. The effects of each pulse of inversion are recorded by successively shallower dips and the age and nature of clasts reworked from the crest of the Sandown Anticline. Most individual hiatuses are interpreted as minor unconformities developed subsequent to inversion, rather than eustatically-generated sequence boundaries:transgressive surfaces. In contrast, the succession north of the Needles Fault (Alum Bay) does not contain hiatuses of magnitude or internal unconformities. In the north-west of the island, subsidiary anticlinal and synclinal structures developed in response to Eocene inversion events by the reactivation of minor basement faults. The new dates of the Eocene inversion events correspond closely with radiometric ages derived from fracture vein-fill calcites in Dorset, to the west (36-48Ma).

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The use of high-resolution stratigraphy and derived lithoclasts to document structural inversion; a case study from the Paleogene, Isle of Wight, U.K.

Andy Gale
Journal of the Geological Society, 22 February 2021, https://doi.org/10.1144/jgs2020-156
Andy Gale
1School of the Environment, Geography and Geological Sciences, University of Portsmouth, Burnaby Building, Burnaby Road, Portsmouth PO13QL UK
2Earth Science Department, The Natural History Museum, Cromwell Road, London SW75BD, UK
Roles: [Conceptualization (Lead)], [Project administration (Lead)], [Writing – original draft (Lead)]
  • Find this author on Google Scholar
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  • ORCID record for Andy Gale
  • For correspondence: andy.gale@port.ac.uk

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The use of high-resolution stratigraphy and derived lithoclasts to document structural inversion; a case study from the Paleogene, Isle of Wight, U.K.

Andy Gale
Journal of the Geological Society, https://doi.org/10.1144/jgs2020-156
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