The Torridonian is the informal name given to a sequence of Mesoproterozoic to Neoproterozoic that outcrop in a strip along the northwestern coast of Scotland and some parts of the Inner Hebrides from the Isle of Mull in the southwest to Cape Wrath in the northeast. They lie unconformity on the Archean to Paleoproterozoic basement rocks of the Lewisian complex and unconformably beneath the Cambrian to Lower Ordovician rocks of the Ardvreck Group.
Little further work was carried out on the Torridonian until the 1950s when Edward Irving and Keith Runcorn sampled the sequence and determined paleomagnetism pole directions, observing a major change between samples from part of the Diabaig Group (as then understood, now known to be part of the Stoer Group) and the overlying Torridon Group. In 1969 Sandy Stewart subdivided the Torridonian into the groups that are in current use. He had already recognised the existence of a major angular unconformity between the Stoer Group and the Torridon Group.
The age of the main part of the Torridonian and of the older Stoer Group is constrained by the youngest ages from the Lewisian complex (~1100 Ma) and the age of the oldest fossils in the Ardvreck Group (~544 Ma). Direct dating of the Torridonian is restricted to: Pb-Pb dating of a limestone in the Stoer Group (1199±70 Ma) and Ar-Ar dating of the Stac Fada Member ejecta blanket deposit at a slightly lower stratigraphic level (1177±5 Ma); Rb-Sr and Pb-Pb dating of phosphate in the Diabaig Formation (994±48 Ma and 951±120 Ma respectively).
Variations in thickness and lithology were interpreted to mean that both the Stoer and Sleat/Torridon Groups were deposited in a rift setting. Evidence from seismic reflection data in the Minch suggested that the Minch Fault was active throughout the deposition of the Torridon Group. This is consistent with the generally westerly derived pebbly material throughout the thickness of the Applecross Formation, suggesting a constantly rejuvenated sediment source in that direction. More recent work has suggested that although the Stoer and Sleat Group groups were probably deposited in a rift setting, the scale and continuity of the Torridon Group, particularly the Applecross and Aultbea Formations, is more consistent with a molasse type foreland basin setting possibly related to the Grenville Orogeny.
In the revised stratigraphic framework for the Proterozoic sedimentary rocks of the Highlands: the Stoer Group is part of a separate sequence whose deposition predated the Grenville Orogeny and has no equivalents in Scotland; the Torridon Group (together with the Sleat Group, the Iona and Tarskavaig groups and three groups on Shetland) are correlated with the Morar Group forming the Wester Ross Supergroup; after the Renlandian Orogeny, the Glenfinnan, Loch Eil and Badenoch groups were deposited and together form the younger Loch Ness Supergroup.
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