Mount Desire Dyke Explained

Mount Desire Dyke is designated place of geological significance. It is located north-east of Hawker in South Australia, on the edge of the Flinders Ranges. The dyke (or dike) is a rock structure where mobile material, being a breccia of rock salt and rubble (as in 'salt diapirs') has intruded into cracks in folded Adelaidean sediments in the geological past [1] [2]

The site was added to the South Australian Heritage Register on 30 March 1998. Its significance is described as follows:[1] [3]

This site contains a number of features of considerable importance to research and debate concerning the nature and origin of the Mt Desire Dyke and other diapirs of the Flinders Ranges, including: typical dolomitic-vanished evaporite breccia and dolostone/metasediment xenoclasts (to km in size) of probable Willouran origin; sharp irregular and distinctive contacts with early Cambrian units such as the Mernmerna Formation, Oraparinna Shale, and Wilkawillina Limestones, including a particularly important apophysis interpreted as an intrusive re-entrant; and significant brecciation in, and metamorphic incongruence between, the material of the dyke and the adjacent Cambrian limestones.

See also

References

-31.7544°N 138.5667°W

Notes and References

  1. PhD thesis of Trev J Mount, 1975, on "Diapirs and diapirism in the Adelaide Geosyncline" (Flinders Ranges) now is published online (free download) by the Department of Energy & Mining (Geological Survey of South Australia) as Report Book 2021/00006
  2. Web site: Search result for "Mount Desire, Mt" with the following layers selected - "Suburbs and Localities", "SA Government Regions", "Gazetteer" and "SA Heritage Places". Location SA Map Viewer . Government of South Australia . 20 October 2022.
  3. Web site: Mount Desire Dyke (designated place of geological significance) . . 30 March 1998 . SA Heritage Places Database Search . Government of South Australia . 24 January 2020 .