Aw. Owen et al., Rare earth elements in chert clasts as provenance indicators in the Ordovician and Silurian of the Southern Uplands of Scotland, SEDIMENT GE, 124(1-4), 1999, pp. 185-195
Rare earth element (REE) patterns in chert clasts provide both an indicatio
n of the environment of deposition of the source succession and a means of
recognising their provenance. The REE compositions of chert clasts in three
Ordovician and Silurian conglomerates in the Southern Uplands of Scotland
are compared to the REE fingerprints of their possible sources. The REE pat
terns of the clasts show that they were derived from successions deposited
close to a continental margin. The absence of clasts with large positive ce
rium anomalies suggests that the Ballantrae Complex was not exposed and sup
plying material to the basin from at least the mid-Caradoc onwards although
a single chert clast from the lower Llandovery conglomerate on Pinstane Hi
ll has an almost identical REE pattern to a black chert from the Ballantrae
Complex. A chert clast from a monomict chert conglomerate in the mid-Carad
oc Kirkcolm Formation has an REE signature identical to that of bedded cher
ts in that formation, indicating an intrabasinal provenance. The REE patter
ns of a chert clast from the Caradoc Blackcraig Formation and of some of th
e clasts from the Pinstane conglomerate lie at the extreme end of those of
the bedded Arenig and Caradoc cherts in the Southern Uplands but the REE pa
tterns of other clasts from Pinstane and one from Caradoc-Ashgill Shinnel F
ormation lie beyond this, suggesting an extrabasinal source. (C) 1999 Elsev
ier Science B.V. All rights reserved.