Rushton, A.W.A., Owen, A.W., Owens, R.M. & Prigmore, J.K. 2000. British Cambrian to Ordovician Stratigraphy. Geological Conservation Review Series No. 18, JNCC, Peterborough, ISBN 1 86107 4727. The original source material for these web pages has been made available by the JNCC under the Open Government Licence 3.0. Full details in the JNCC Open Data Policy
Afon Llafar
Introduction
The Afon Llafar site exposes the basal stratotype of the Clogau Formation and is the only section in which the three zones recognized in the Clogau Formation are proved in stratigraphical succession. An exposure of the lowest part of the overlying Maentwrog Formation is one of only two that have yielded Middle Cambrian fossils.
The Clogau Formation was originally taken as the basal part of the 'Lingula Flags' (Salter, 1864a, pl. 10, p. 4), but with the detection of Paradoxides and other fossils in the unit, Belt (1867b, p. 494) excluded it from the 'Maentwrog Group', the lowest division of the 'Lingula Flags' as restricted by him, and he employed the South Welsh term 'Menevian Group'. The name 'Clogau Shales' was introduced by Andrew (1910) as a local name for the lowest unit of dark-grey laminated mudstones in the Dolgellau district, and the unit was described fully and its outcrop mapped by Matley and Wilson (1946). Allen et al. (1981) formalized the term 'Clogau Formation' and defined a basal stratotype in the Afon Llafar. Subsequently Pratt et al. (1995) described a clearer and much larger (though less fossiliferous) exposure on the coast at Llwyngwril
Description
Allen et al. (1981, p. 301) described the transitional contact (at
A further 50 m upstream and about 15 m higher stratigraphically, sparse representatives of the punctuosus Zone appear
Alluvium covers the contact between the Clogau and Maentwrog formations, but a mudstone bed estimated to occur about 25 m above the base of the Maentwrog
Interpretation
The Afon Llafar includes the basal stratotype for the Clogau Formation and shows the faunal succession from fissus to punctuosus zones better than anywhere else in North Wales. The choice of a basal stratotype for the Clogau Formation is arbitrary on account of the generally transitional nature of the basal contact, but also because of regional variation in both the Gamlan and Clogau formations. At Afon Llafar the Gamlan includes a coarse sandstone, with the Cefn Coch Grit of Matley and Wilson (1946) as its topmost division, and the Clogau Formation is dominantly of dark-grey laminated mudstone. At the contact at Llwyngwril, described in detail by Pratt et al. (1995), the Cefn Coch Grit is absent and the Clogau Formation, though marked by the appearance of laminated hemipelagite, contains a higher proportion of sandstone and siltstone. The Llafar section is much clearer biostratigraphically. At Llwyngwril the only useful fossil is a Plutonides hicksii, indicating the fissus Zone, found about 40 m above the base of the formation (Pratt et at, 1995). In the Llafar section the fissus Zone is confined to the lowest 15 m of the section and is overlain by the parvifrons Zone, also about 15 m thick, followed by the punctuosus Zone, which appears to be more than 60 m thick (Allen et al., 1981).
The occurrence of Middle Cambrian fossils near the base of the Maentwrog Formation and the Olenus Zone higher up shows that the base of the Upper Cambrian lies within the formation. Allen et al. (1981, p. 306) suggest that a non-sequence corresponding to the brachymetopa Zone separates the Maentwrog and Clogau formations and that the pisiformis Zone may be represented by strata that have not yet yielded diagnostic fossils. A comparable situation is inferred at Porth Ceiriad (see site description), where the basal non-sequence is more pronounced, but the Middle Cambrian fossils may be largely derived, and the strata representing the pisiformis Zone are not proved (Young et al, 1994). In contrast, Pratt et al. (1995) described the contact between the Clogau and Maentwrog formations at Llwyngwril as conformable; however, there is insufficient biostratigraphical control (none for the Maentwrog) from which to infer this, and from the evidence elsewhere a non-sequence may be suspected.
Conclusions
Afon Llafar is the only place in North Wales to show the full succession of trilobite faunas, from the fissus to punctuosus zones, that inhabited the Welsh Basin during mid-Middle Cambrian times. These faunas allow correlation with the lithologically similar Menevian Beds of South Wales. It is one of only two places where one can identify the time in the late Middle Cambrian at which the pyritic mid-Middle Cambrian deposits were replaced by influxes of the sandy Maentwrog Formation.