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
Aldons Quarry
Potential GCR Site
Introduction
Although not a confirmed GCR site at the time of writing, Aldons Quarry is described as a potential site because it is of regional importance in the succession of the Girvan district from a stratigraphical and palaeoenvironmental point of view and is internationally important palaeontologically. The site is the type locality for a large number of fossil species of markedly Laurentian aspect. It also provides both sedimentological and palaeoecological evidence for the profound effects of basement faulting in the accumulation and distribution of sediment in the Ordovician of the Midland Valley Terrane.
The abandoned quarry at Aldons
In his classic work on the Girvan succession (when considering the Stinchar Limestone — part of his 'Stinchar calcareous series'), Lapworth (1882, p. 573) provided the first detailed description of Aldons Quarry. A further brief description was given by Peach and Horne (1899, p. 495), who disputed the faulted contact between the Stinchar Limestone and the underlying Ballantrae Complex postulated by Lapworth and suggested that it may be an unconformity, a view subsequently endorsed by Williams (1962), Ince (1984) and Ingham (1992a). Williams (1962) provided a modern description of the Aldons brachiopods, and Tripp (1967, 1976) described the trilobite faunas. Most recently, Ingham (1992a, p. 393) described and interpreted the site in a field guide to the Girvan district. The lithological divisions and their thicknesses given below are largely taken from that work.
Description
Aldons Quarry lies on the southern limb of a large fold known as the Aldons Anticline, with the beds in the main quarry dipping fairly gently to the ESE. However, in the smaller, south-eastern, quarry the dip is reversed as the beds are folded around a NE-plunging syncline truncated against a NE–SW fault (British Geological Survey, 1988b).
In the north-west part of the main quarry, spilites of the Ballantrae Complex are overlain by a 1.5 m thick conglomerate, with angular clasts almost entirely of spilite. Some 17 m of dark-green pebbly sandstones overlie this conglomerate and are succeeded by 1.5 m of grey cobbly limestones with sandstone partings, followed by 1.5 m of cobbly and pebbly limestone. Many of the limestone cobbles are nodules of the calcareous alga Girvanella, which also coats most of the litho- and bioclasts. The following 6 m of cobbly limestone and 28 m of grey nodular and platy limestone are also rich in Girvanella. The Stinchar Limestone is capped by over 12 m of thinly bedded, grey, platy limestone and calcareous mudstone yielding a rich shelly fauna. In addition to calcareous algae, the Stinchar Limestone at Aldons contains, especially in its upper part, a diverse shelly fauna, including trilobites (Tripp, 1967, 1993), brachiopods (Williams, 1962), gastropods (Reed, 1920; Longstaff, 1924), ostracods and echinoderms (Peach and Horne, 1899, p. 690). Bergström (1990, p. 24, fig. 3) extracted a sparse conodont fauna, probably belonging in the Pygodus anserinus Zone, from an unspecified level in the upper part of the formation. He was able to identify the base of this zone in the middle of the Stinchar Limestone in the section at Benan Burn (Bergström, 1990, p. 6).
The Stinchar Limestone is overlain by the richly fossiliferous Superstes Mudstone: up to 1.8 m of sheared mudstone with calcareous nodules, seen on the south-east wall of the main quarry
Interpretation
The sedimentary units exposed at Aldons Quarry form part of the Barr Group, the full succession of which extends from the middle Llanvirn Kirkland Conglomerate through the Confinis Formation and its equivalents up into the Stinchar Limestone, ending with the thick (up to 640 m) Benan Conglomerate of early Caradoc age
The faunas of the Stinchar Limestone and Superstes Mudstone are particularly illuminating. Their palaeobiogeographical affinities are wholly Laurentian (Williams, 1962; Bergström, 1990; Tripp, 1993), indicating the location of the Midland Valley Terrane on the 'North American' side of the Iapetus Ocean. The trilobite fauna from the upper part of the Stinchar Limestone is very similar to that of the platy upper Stinchar Limestone elsewhere and comprises 27 species (Tripp, 1967). It represents a fairly shallow-shelf assemblage, assigned by Ingham and Tripp (1991) to the illaenid–cheirurid type of association, although Tripp (1993) considered it to be a deeper-water fauna than the illaenid–cheirurid association of the lower Stinchar Limestone.
Trilobites are by far the most abundant elements of the fauna of the Superstes Mudstone at Aldons. The whole fauna was described most recently by Tripp (1976), who also reviewed taxa described previously by Reed, Lamont and Begg. The fauna is remarkably diverse, comprising 69 species belonging to 52 genera. Twenty-one species have their type locality at Aldons, and Tripp (1993, fig. 4) showed the broad taxonomic composition of the fauna, based on 3261 specimens. That 5% of these specimens are referable to the genus Nileus led Ingham and Tripp (1991) to assign the fauna to a 'borderline Nileus association', indicating a deepening from the environment of deposition of the Stinchar Limestone. They assigned 42% of the trilobites in the Superstes Mudstone at Craigneil, some 6.5 km to the south-west of Aldons, to Nileus, thus indicating a fully developed Nileus association there. The deeper water indicated by the trilobite fauna at Craigneil is also explained in terms of fault-induced subsidence (Ingham and Tripp, 1993, fig. 3).
Conclusions
The rock succession at Aldons Quarry and the changes in water depth indicated by its fossils help to demonstrate the importance of basement faulting in the Girvan district during the Ordovician. This included the progressive northward extension of sedimentation through time over the eroded Ballantrae Complex, across a series of major NE–SW faults. Aldons is also the type locality for a large number of fossil species, all of which have very strong affinities to those of North America, indicating the greater proximity during the Llanvirn and early Caradoc of the Midland Valley Terrane to the low-latitude Laurentian plate than to the Avalonian microplate, which included England and Wales.