Stac Fada Member

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Stac Fada Member
Stratigraphic range: Mesoproterozoic
File:Accretionary Lapilli - geograph.org.uk - 831917.jpg
Accretionary lapilli from the Stac Fada Member
Type Member
Unit of Bay of Stoer Formation, Stoer Group
Underlies Poll a' Mhuilt Member
Thickness 4 to 10.5 m
Location
Country Scotland
Extent 55 km along the coast of NW Scotland
Type section
Named for Stac Fada, a small headland west of Stoer

The Stac Fada Member is a distinctive layer towards the top of the Mesoproterozoic Bay of Stoer Formation, part of the Torridonian Supergroup. Evidence for a bolide impact centered on Ullapool was published by a combined team of scientists from the University of Oxford and the University of Aberdeen, in March 2008.[1] The evidence is centred on Ullapool, a harbour town on Loch Broom in the Ross and Cromarty district of the Highland council area of northwest Scotland. This suggests it was the largest bolide impact ever to strike what are now the British Isles. The impact, which has been dated to 1177±5 million years ago,[2] melted rock at the site and left parallel shock fractures in quartz and biotite and a tell-tale trace of iridium. Centered on the impact crater, a wide ejecta field has been traced, some 50 km across, forming the Stac Fada member within the Stoer Group of the Torridonian. The affected layer of rock, which on land stretches from Gairloch in the south to Stoer in the north is six to 22 metres thick.[3] Until recently, these anomalous formations[4] were unsatisfactorily credited to an isolated instance of volcanism.

The crater, preserved under sedimentary layers of sandstone, is currently presumed to lie under the Minch, the waterway that separates the Isle of Lewis in the Outer Hebrides from the north-west Highlands of Scotland. It has been estimated that the impact would have created a blast with the force of 145,000 megatons and that the shock wave would have created winds of 420 km/h as far away as the site of modern Aberdeen.[3]

See also

References

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  4. The strata under study are part of the Stac Fada Member of the Precambrian Stoer Group of Scotland.
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