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
Betton Dingle
Introduction
Betton Dingle is the type locality for the Betton Shale Formation and shows some of the best exposures in the upper part of the Abereiddian Stage as developed in the Shelve area, ranging from the higher part of the Hope Shale Formation (artus Zone) through the Weston Flags Formation to the Betton Shale Formation (both murchisoni Zone).
The Betton Shale Formation was introduced by Lapworth and Watts (1910, p. 752) as the Tenon' or Didymograptus murchisoni Shales'. Although the Weston Flags Formation, introduced by Lapworth (1887, p. 662) as the 'Weston Group', has its type locality to the south, at Priestweston (Whittard, 1960, p. 281), its most fossiliferous development is to be found in Betton Dingle. The stratigraphical nomenclature in the Shelve area has undergone many modifications since Lapworth's (1887) original scheme (see Whittard, 1979, fig. 3). The nomenclature used by the British Geological Survey (1991, 1994b) is used here, being an updated version of that proposed by Whittard (1979).
Betton Dingle has featured in most stratigraphical descriptions of the Shelve succession, as the type locality for the Betton Shale Formation and also as a source of fossils: trilobites (Whittard, 1955–1967), brachiopods (Williams, 1974), graptolites (Strachan, 1986) and crinoids (Ramsbottom, 1961; Donovan, 1986–1995).
Description
The section is described working downstream and upwards through the succession. Northeast of Ganderbeach the stream follows the line of a fault, which controls its course along the western flanks of Bromlow Callow
Some 120 m south-east of the road bridge at Lyde, the Weston Flags Formation passes upwards into the Betton Shale Formation
Interpretation
Betton Dingle affords one of the best sections through the upper part of the Abereiddian Stage in the Shelve succession. Even though much of it is drift-covered and exposure is discontinuous, there are sufficient exposures to demonstrate the typical lithologies and faunas of the upper part of the Hope Shale, Weston Flags and Betton Shale formations.
Faunally there are changes from the atheloptic Ampyx–Protolloydolithus–Stapeleyella faunas of the higher Hope Shales to the Platycoryphe–Ogyginus–Tissintia–bivalve fauna of the Weston Flags, which is akin to the Neseuretus biofacies, and the Bettonolithus–Trinucleus–Ogygiocaris–Didymograptus fauna of the Betton Shales, which is of intermediate character. The whole sequence is a markedly shallower-water facies than that of the lower Hope Shales (see Hope Valley site report), which is in a cyclopygid biofacies. The Weston Flags Formation in particular has been interpreted as being extremely shallow-water, even estuarine, in origin (Whittard, 1979, p. 38), with fossiliferous horizons containing rich, bivalve-dominated faunas; the presence of brachiopods, trilobites and crinoids attests to fully marine conditions prevailing, at least during deposition of the shale horizons. The mixed, more 'normal' trilobite-graptolite faunas in the silty shales of the Betton Shale Formation suggest a return to slightly deeper, more offshore conditions and seem to herald a general deepening in the succeeding Meadowtown Formation and Rorrington Shale Formation of Llandeilian–Aurelucian age.
Several of the fossils are common to other outcrops of Abereiddian strata, especially Didymograptus murchisoni, which is widely distributed and is taken to indicate the murchisoni Zone in the Betton Shales. Another example is Bettonolithus chamberlaini, which occurs at Howey Brook (see site report) and is taken to indicate the murchisoni Zone there (Davies et al., 1997). Ogyginus corndensis is widespread in Abereiddian and early Llandeilian rocks in the Builth Inlier, and Tissintia prototypa characterizes the later Abereiddian in the Llandeilo and Builth districts. Other forms are peculiar to the Shelve area and are probably more closely facies-controlled.
Conclusions
Betton Dingle is an important section for interpreting the Shelve area. The graptolite–trilobite faunas enable correlation of the Abereiddian of the Shelve sequence with areas elsewhere and allow an interpretation of the changing environments of deposition.