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  3. Late Wenlock sequence and bentonite stratigraphy in the Malvern, Suckley and Abberley Hills, England

Late Wenlock sequence and bentonite stratigraphy in the Malvern, Suckley and Abberley Hills, England

Across the study area fifteen parasequences associated with two pronounced regressive episodes, separated by a marked transgression, can be identified. The lithological responses to these relative sea-level changes are the same as those reported from the West Midlands, including the threefold division of the Much Wenlock Limestone Formation into Lower Quarried Limestone, Nodular Beds and Upper Quarried Limestone Members. Apatite REE geochemical signatures from Whitman’s Hill Quarry identify three bentonites which probably originated from a granodiorite magmatic source, while a fourth bentonite has a distinctively mafic composition, more akin to that of a gabbro or syenite. This distinctively mafic bentonite is preserved on a marked flooding surface within the Nodular Beds Member and appears compositionally and stratigraphically equivalent to a bentonite at Wren’s Nest Hill (West Midlands). Furthermore in both sections this bentonite is of notable thickness (120–200 mm) allowing for its identification in other sections across the region. Comparisons with Gotland identify three closely spaced bentonites of a similar mafic composition to the bentonite described from the Midland Platform. While similarities in stratigraphic position and composition do not, at present, allow for the identification of a single ash fall event covering both the Midland Platform and Gotland, they are indicative of a shared source region, which may offer the possibility for future bentonite correlation between these regions.

Publication Details

  • Type

    Journal Article
  • Title

    Late Wenlock sequence and bentonite stratigraphy in the Malvern, Suckley and Abberley Hills, England
  • Year

    2013
  • Author(s)

    Ray, D.C., Richards, T.D., Brett, C.E., Morton, A.C. and Brown, A.M.
  • Journal

    Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology
  • Volume

    389
  • Page(s)

    115-127
  • URL

    http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.palaeo.2013.03.024
  • People

    • Andy Morton

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