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Depositional features of dittonian rocks : Pembrokeshire compared with the Welsh Borderland

By: Allen, J.R.L.
Material type: ArticleArticleDescription: 385-400pp ; Illustration.Subject(s): Sandstone - Welsh Borderland | Dittonian rock - Welsh Borderland | Dittonian rock - Pembrokeshire - Welsh Borderland In: Geological magazine : Vol. 100 Iss. 1-6 Year. 1963Summary: Abstract The Dittonian Stage in Pembrokeshire comprises the Lower Marl Group (higher beds), the Sandstone-and-Marl Group, and the Upper Marl Group (at least lower half). These formations cannot be distinguished lithologically from Dittonian strata of the Welsh Borderland 100 miles away along the depositional strike. Cyclothems of intraformational conglomerate (scoured surface below) → sandstone → siltstone with concretions recur vertically in each area. The conglomerates in both districts consist of intraformational siltstone and concretionary debris. Flat-bedding, primary current lineation, planar cross-bedding, trough cross-bedding, and ripple-drift bedding are common to the sandstones. Suncracked siltstones abound in both Pembrokeshire and the Welsh Borderland. Slumped bedding, sandstone pipes, and animal burrows are the structures penecontemporaneous with deposition in each area. The Dittonian strata of the Welsh Borderland are shown to be probably floodplain deposits, by reason of their close similarity to the modern sediments of the Colorado Delta floodplain and Colorado River. The occurrence of an identical facies in Pembrokeshire suggests the even wider extent of this floodplain in early Lower Old Red Sandstone times, when the sea lay far to the south of both areas.
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Abstract
The Dittonian Stage in Pembrokeshire comprises the Lower Marl Group (higher beds), the Sandstone-and-Marl Group, and the Upper Marl Group (at least lower half). These formations cannot be distinguished lithologically from Dittonian strata of the Welsh Borderland 100 miles away along the depositional strike.

Cyclothems of intraformational conglomerate (scoured surface below) → sandstone → siltstone with concretions recur vertically in each area. The conglomerates in both districts consist of intraformational siltstone and concretionary debris. Flat-bedding, primary current lineation, planar cross-bedding, trough cross-bedding, and ripple-drift bedding are common to the sandstones. Suncracked siltstones abound in both Pembrokeshire and the Welsh Borderland. Slumped bedding, sandstone pipes, and animal burrows are the structures penecontemporaneous with deposition in each area.

The Dittonian strata of the Welsh Borderland are shown to be probably floodplain deposits, by reason of their close similarity to the modern sediments of the Colorado Delta floodplain and Colorado River. The occurrence of an identical facies in Pembrokeshire suggests the even wider extent of this floodplain in early Lower Old Red Sandstone times, when the sea lay far to the south of both areas.

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