Abstract
Four new U–Pb isotope dilution thermal ionization mass spectrometry dates from Carboniferous igneous rocks of the Midland Valley of Scotland are integrated with 16 recently published 40 Ar/ 39 Ar dates. The numerical and stratigraphical ages of the dated samples are compatible to stage level, allowing improved intrabasinal and regional correlations. Early Carboniferous extension-related volcanism in the Midland Valley was pulsed, with a date of 343.4 ± 1.0 Ma from the Garleton Hills Volcanic Formation and dates of 334.7 ± 1.7 and 335.2 ± 0.8 Ma from the Clyde Plateau Volcanic Formation. The magmatic pulses are synchronous with synrift phases in the Northumberland–Solway Basin. Volcanism continued in mid- to Late Carboniferous time contemporaneous with dextral strike-slip tectonics, in contrast to a post-rift tectonic setting in northern England. After Late Carboniferous basin inversion, tholeiitic magmatism dated at 307.6 ± 4.8 Ma provides a maximum Westphalian D age for post-Variscan magmatism and extension–dextral transtension across Scotland and northern England. In the Early Permian, as rift systems developed across NW Europe, alkaline extension-related magmatism resumed in the Midland Valley from c . 298 to 292 Ma. The improved geochronology provides important data for poorly constrained parts of the numerical Carboniferous time scale such as stages within the Viséan, and provides a well-controlled tie-point that supports a Tournaisian–Viséan boundary age of c . 345.4 Ma.
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