The Outer Hebrides Fault Zone is a major ESE-dipping detachment exposed within basement
gneisses of the Archaean–Palaeoproterozoic Lewisian Complex, northwest Scotland. The fault
zone exhibits a long-lived displacement history and was active during Proterozoic, end-Silurian,
Carboniferous and Mesozoic times. The earliest deformation event preserved onshore was associated
with top-to-the-NW ductile thrusting. A previous study proposed that thrust-related protomylonitic
and mylonitic fabrics are cross-cut by amphibolites (‘Younger Basics’) and Laxfordian granite and
pegmatite sheets. This evidence was used to suggest that ductile thrusting occurred during the
Palaeoproterozoic Inverian event at c. 2500 Ma. Our observations demonstrate, however, that
mylonitic fabrics within the ductile thrust zone are superimposed on all components of the gneiss
complex including amphibolites and Laxfordian intrusions. It therefore follows that the Outer
Hebrides Fault Zone cannot be older than c. 1685 Ma, the age of recently dated Laxfordian granites in
the Outer Hebrides. Geochronological studies have shown that the basement blocks of the northern
Outer Hebrides and Scottish mainland have different geological histories and were amalgamated during
Proterozoic times at or after c. 1700 Ma. We propose that early ductile thrusting along the Outer
Hebrides Fault Zone formed part of this amalgamation process leading to burial and reheating of the
footwall gneisses in Lewis and north Harris. This would account for the c. 1100 Ma thermal event
recorded by previous workers and implies that ductile thrusting along the Outer Hebrides Fault Zone
is of Grenvillian age.