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
Marshwood
Introduction
Marshwood is the historical type section for the Marshbrookian Substage of the Cheneyan Stage and is nationally important in containing the basal stratotype for the Actonian Substage of the overlying Streffordian Stage. The faunal change at the base of the Actonian is one of the most striking in the type upper Caradoc and permits correlation with Scandinavia and potentially with sequences deposited around Gondwana. Marshwood is also the type locality for several trilobite and brachiopod species.
Bancroft (1929b) introduced the term 'Marshbrookian' for a stage of the Caradoc and subsequently (1945) designated his Upper Longville Flags in the lane through Marshwood as the type section. The Marshbrookian is now considered a substage of the Cheneyan Stage (Fortey et al., 1995). Bancroft (1929b) divided the Marshbrookian into three brachiopod zones, in ascending order the zones of Wattsella wattsi, W. unguis and Kjaerulfina polycyma. The last of these was subsequently renamed the Onniella reuschi Zone (Bancroft, 1933). Hurst (1979b) redefined Bancroft's Upper Longville Flags as the Crosspipes Member of the Cheney Longville Formation. He designated its basal stratotype and that of the Marshbrookian at Cheney Longville, south of the Onny River, but illustrated a reference section for the lower part of the member in the river section at the northern end of Marshwood
Description
At the time of writing (1996) the Marshwood section is extensively overgrown, but Greig et al. (1968) estimated a succession of a little over 30 m was present in the quarry and track to the south. The measured section provided by Hurst (1979b, fig. 14) forms the basis of
Interpretation
Hurst (1979a, table 1) interpreted the Cross-pipes Member as comprising distal storm sands together with silts that settled out from suspension (cf. Brenchley and Newall, 1982). It represents a deepening from the Woolstonian Glynboro Member of the Cheney Longville Formation. The Marshwood section is richly fossiliferous. Faunal lists were given, by Greig et al. (1968, appendix 1) and incorporated .by Hurst (1979a, b) in the quantitative and semiquantita-tive lists of the faunal associations present in the member. Trilobites (Dean, 1960, 1961b, 1963a, b), brachiopods (Hurst, 1979b) and chitinozoans (Jenkins, 1967) have been described from the site, which is the type locality for several species, including the zonally important Marshbrookian trilobite Broeggerolithus transiens.
Hurst (1979a; see also Lockley, 1983) termed the three faunal assemblages present in the Crosspipes Member, in ascending order, the Dalmanella multiplicata–Sowerbyella sericea Association, the D. unguis Association and the Onniella reuschi–Sowerbyella sericea Association. The base of the Actonian was defined at the base of the last of these, at a level that Hurst (1979b, p. 211) considered to be one of the most prominent faunal turnovers in the type upper Caradoc, possibly representing a wider than local ecological event. He gave a quantitative breakdown of the highest Marshbrookian and lowest Actonian faunas in the Marshwood section, showing the sudden introduction and dominance of the brachiopod Onniella reuschi. The Streffordian Stage, of which the Actonian is the lower substage, can be recognized in Scandinavia on the basis of its trilobite faunas (Fortey et al., 1995, p. 23), and the appearance of the trilobite Onnia in the upper part of the stage holds the promise of close correlation with Gondwanan successions.
Conclusions
Marshwood is a nationally significant site, being the type section for the Marshbrookian Substage of the Cheneyan Stage of the type Caradoc Series and for the base of the succeeding Actonian Substage of the Streffordian Stage. It is thus important for correlation of the Caradoc, both within the Anglo-Welsh area and internationally. The site is the type locality for species of trilobite and brachiopod, and the shelly faunas have played a significant role in assessing the changes in Ordovician benthic communities in this part of the Welsh Basin.