Hi Mr C, thanks for the reply, I think we can safely nail it down to the Ordovician, however, which part of the Ordovician is the problem. Strens (1965) suggests the deposits occur as joint coatings and replacements in an intrusive diabase and in surrounding volcanic rocks. Millard and Young (BGS) suggest ages of 382-376 Ma for the dolerite and graphite respectively, using the K-Ar method, however, extensine investigations of a wide variety of Lake District igneous rocks have shown the dates using other isotopic dating methods to be much older than the dates using the K-Ar method.
The elements K and Ar are mobilised very readily during geological processes, thus resetting the isotopic clock.
This would suggest the Seathwaite graphite is much, much older than Middle Devonian.
It is commonly understood that the graphite at Seathwaite is closely associated with the dolerite intrusion (diabase) which cuts andesite within the lower part of the Ordovician Borrowdale Volcanic Group.
Can I then conclude, if the graphite was formed as a result of the dolerite intrusion, it must be Middle Ordovician or even Upper Ordovician.
Is there a link you can supply with regard to p142 of Ian Tyler's book
Once again, thanks, much appreciated. :confused: