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
Hope Valley
Introduction
This is the type area for the 'Hope Shale Formation', a term introduced by Lapworth and Watts (1894, p. 316) as the 'Hope Shales' or 'Hope Shale Group'. Strictly speaking, the term 'Hope Shale Formation' related to the mudstone formation lying below the Stapeley Volcanic rocks, but in current usage (British Geological Survey, 1991) it encompasses both the Stapeley Volcanic rocks (as a 'Member') and the overlying Stapeley Shales, the type localities for which are respectively Stapeley Hill, west of Shelve, and Holywell Brook, near Rorrington.
The Hope Shale Formation as developed in the Hope Valley
Description
The Hope Shales below the Stapeley Volcanic Member are, on Whittard's (1931, p. 327) estimate, nearly 245 m thick and consists of a monotonous sequence of blue-black, rusty-weathering shales. It includes beds of acid vitro-clastic tuffs, the so-called 'Chinastone Ash' of earlier publications, now referred to as the 'Hyssington Volcanic Member'
There are two major tuff bands in the vicinity of Hope hamlet, around the NE-plunging nose of the Shelve Anticline. Some of the youngest Hope Shales locally, above the upper tuff band, are exposed in the stream
In the stream south of the quarry, shales below the upper tuff band crop out in a fairly long section
Shales above the upper tuff, at a similar horizon to those seen at Whittard's localities 834 L–N at Hope (see above), are exposed in Hope Brook
Hope Quarry, at the northern end of the site
Interpretation
The Hope Valley is important in showing to greatest advantage the lower part of the Hope Shale Formation, which underlies the Stapeley Volcanic Member. Whittard (1931, p. 323) and Dean (in Whittard, 1955–1967, p. 312) remarked on the similarity between the faunas of the Hope Shales and the approximately coeval faunas of Bohemia, for example in the Barka Formation. The trilobite fauna of the Hope Shales includes cyclopygid taxa indicative of the Cylcopygid Biofacies of Fortey and Owens (1987), together with other trilobites that are small-eyed or blind, together constituting a typical atheloptic assemblage (Fortey and Owens, 1987, p. 105); this association is consistent with a deep-water facies. The genera (and in many cases species) are common to those of the late Arenig Pontyfenni Formation (see Pontyfenni site), which was deposited under very similar conditions, but the difference in age is reflected in different subspecies of Pricyclopyge binodosa and in particular in the graptolite fauna, which includes abundant pendent didymograptids; these indicate the presence of the artus Zone of the Abereiddian Stage. Coeval strata in southwest Wales (e.g. at Llanfallteg and Abereiddi see site reports) have similar faunas but were probably deposited in slightly shallower conditions, having fewer cyclopygid trilobites. This contrast implies major subsidence on the Linley-Pontesford Fault at the margin of the Welsh Basin (cf. Prigmore et al., 1997).
Many of the chitinozoans have long ranges extending up to the Llandeilian or into the Caradoc (see Jenkins, 1967, table 1), but some species, for example Cyathochitina calix (Eisenack), appear to be shorter-ranging and are common to the approximately coeval expansus Limestone of Sweden and 'Glaukonitkalk' of Estonia.
Conclusions
The Hope Shales Formation exposed at this site represents typical background deep-water deposition of the early Llanvirn and contains a particularly varied and well-preserved trilobite fauna associated with graptolites of zonal significance. This is valuable nationally and internationally because it contributes to the correlation of the graptolitic successions in west Wales and northern England with the trilobitic succession in North and South Wales and abroad (in Bohemia).