Gal. Johnson et Kc. Dunham, Emplacement of the Great Whin Dolerite Complex and the Little Whin Sill inrelation to the structure of northern England, P YORKS G S, 53, 2001, pp. 177-186
By definition, sills are concordant, tabular sheet-like bodies of igneous r
ock with the Great Whin Sill of northern England often quoted as a primary
example. Analysis of surface and subsurface records of the Great Whin shows
that it is seldom concordant over wide areas and usually rises and falls i
n the stratigraphical succession in gentle transgressions and abrupt jumps
to new levels. The term 'sill' is not used here for the Great Whin complex,
but is used for the related Little Whin Sill of Weardale, Co. Durham. Stud
ies of the petrology of the dolerite Whin complex have brought out signific
ant differences between the Little Whin and the Great Whin. The Little Whin
Sill is olivine-bearing and believed to be composed of an early differenti
ate of the Whin dolerite magma. The Great Whin, non-olivine-bearing and sli
ghtly density graded, is a later differentiate of the Whin magma. Two separ
ate periods of Whin dolerite injection are confirmed by studies of vitrinit
e reflectance over the Alston Block where two periods of Whin contact metam
orphism have been recognized. The two periods of Whin dolerite emplacement
form part of the end-Carboniferous earth movements in northern England. The
y can be shown to have occurred between a period of compression from a W-SW
direction and later gentle doming of the Alston Block near the Westphalian
-Stephanian boundary, dated about 300-295 Ma.