The Lake District Boundary Fault Zone (LDBFZ) lies at the boundary between
the Permo-Triassic East Irish Sea Basin and the Lower Palaeozoic Lake Distr
ict Block. It divides northwards, within west Cumbria, into a network of fa
ult strands that lie within the cover sequence of Upper Palaeozoic and youn
ger rocks and Lower Palaeozoic basement rocks, and terminates at the St Bee
s Fault Zone. The earliest evidence of movement across the LDBFZ during the
Ordovician is drawn from the component Thistleton Fault which has a volcan
otectonic origin and bounds blocks of distinctive stratigraphy and structur
e. Reactivation of the LDBFZ in response to regional tectonic events occurr
ed during the Late Palaeozoic, Mesozoic and Cainozoic. Oblique reverse disp
lacement during the late Carboniferous was associated with Variscan basin i
nversion. East-west extension and syndepositional normal displacement accom
panied the formation of the East Irish Sea Basin during Permian and early T
riassic times. Analysis of fracture mineralization phases from the fault zo
ne strands demonstrates repeated fault activity from mid-Triassic to early
Cretaceous times. Slickenside data from the Sellafield area indicate these
phases of Mesozoic faulting accommodated dip-slip displacement and south-we
st-directed extension. Regional uplift during the Cainozoic was accompanied
by basin inversion; oblique-reverse displacement across the LDBFZ at this
time was accompanied by Cainozoic folding of the hanging-wall block. The st
ructural evolution and displacement history noted for the LDBFZ is likely t
o have been similar to that of other major faults of north-north-west trend
in northern England, notably the Pennine Fault.