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 Seiont
Introduction
The Afon Seiont exposes an important local section through the upper part of the Arenig Series, furnishing some of the best palaeontological evidence for the Fennian and lower Llanvirn strata in the Nant Ffrancon 'Formation' (now Subgroup), whose outcrop extends north-east to Bangor and is widespread in Snowdonia.
The Arenig age of rocks in this section was recognized by Hicks (in Marr, 1876, p. 126) and by Ramsay (1881, p. 197). Elles (1904, pp. 200–203), who identified on the basis of graptolite faunas the presence of the extensus, hirundo and bifidus zones, was of the opinion that most of the. Arenig was represented, suggesting that it is one of the few continuous sections through this interval in Britain. However, Beckly (1987) re-collected these exposures and demonstrated that only the upper part of the Arenig (Fennian Stage) and lower part of the Llanvirn (Abereiddian Stage) can be proved. Although the Arenig–Llanvirn boundary itself crops out here, it is poorly exposed, and is better exposed on the shore at Penrhyn Park, Bangor
Afon Seiont is the type locality for the trilobite Aeglina hughesii Hicks (in Marr, 1876) (a junior synonym of Pricyclopyge binodosa) and for the phyllocarid crustacean Caryocaris marrii (a junior synonym of C. wrightii Salter). The faunas here are mixed graptolitic–shelly facies, and afford correlation between South Wales and the Lake District.
Description
The section is described from north to south, up sequence
The highest part of the Arenig is exposed in outcrops to the south, alongside the path of an old tramway. Here, the topmost 75 m is much sandier and is poorly fossiliferous but has yielded biserial graptolites, including Undulograptus austrodentatus (Harris and Keble) at
On the opposite bank of the Seiont, near the gates to Eryri Hospital, blue-black cleaved shales, commonly iron-stained, are exposed to the north of a dolerite intrusion around
Interpretation
Although Beckly's (1987) work has shown that less of the Arenig is present here than was formerly supposed, the locality does afford a useful section through the late Arenig and early Llanvirn, and confirms the presence in North Wales of the general sequence described in South Wales by Fortey and Owens (1987). Perhaps most significant is the presence of the graptolite Pseudisograptus manubriatus koi, which is widespread globally, and in Australia is restricted to the Yapeenian Stage (Fortey et al., 1990, p. 127). The presence of this species immediately below and in the basal part of the U. austrodentatus Zone (Mitchell and Maletz, 1995, p. 319, fig. 2) suggests that horizons well down and close to the base of the austrodentatus Zone are present here. The oldest part of this section is therefore older than the type Fennian at Pontyfenni, which has yielded species diagnostic of the upper part of the austrodentatus Zone. The austrodentatus Zone is a globally recognized chronostratigraphical division with a base defined in China (Webby, 1998), and the occurrence of both P. manubriatus koi and U. austrodentatus in the Afon Seiont section makes this the best British section at which to identify its base.
The presence of cyclopygid trilobites throughout, together with an isograptid graptolite near the basal part of the section, suggests the presence of a deep-water, offshore environment. The sandy interval at the top of the Arenig may represent a regressive phase, followed by a return to deeper water at the base of the Llanvirn, corresponding to a transgression over Gondwana that was widespread at this time.
Conclusions
The Afon Seiont section is important nationally. The faunas allow identification in Britain of the internationally recognized Undulograptus austrodentatus Zone, and they include both trilobites and graptolites that aid correlation between the upper Arenig succession in South Wales with that in the English Lake District. Regionally the section provides biostratigraphi-cal evidence for the age of the lower part of the Nant Ffrancon Subgroup, which, though thick and widespread, rarely reveals fossiliferous beds in such good stratigraphical succession.