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
Rhobell-y-Big–Foel Gron
Introduction
Localities in the Dolgellau Formation between Rhobell-y-big and Foel Gron yield the best faunas of the Peltura scarabaeoides Zone in Wales. These are of value for correlation with those from the measured section at Ogof Ddû and the Scandinavian standard succession.
The Peltura scarabaeoides Zone is recognized on both east and west sides of the Harlech Dome, but whereas the material collected to the west (from Penmorfa and Garreg-wen (Salter, 1866b, p. 250) and from Ogof Ddû (see site report)) is commonly strongly deformed, the localities between Foel Gron and Rhobell-y-big yield relatively well-preserved specimens. Various localities hereabouts were evidently known to early collectors and appear to include the type localities of some trilobite species described by Belt (1868), but the present localities were described more exactly by Wells (1925, p. 467) and Allen et al. (1981).
Description
Two main streams drain the moorland between Rhobell-y-big and Foel Gron. The lower reaches of the western stream
Interpretation
The faunas consist entirely of trilobites and include only agnostids and olenids, forms that were adapted to dysaerobic environments typical of the Dolgellau Formation, also evinced here by the lack of bioturbation. The species of Ctenopyge reported from the bisulcata Subzone allow correlation with the bisulcata Subzone of the Scandinavian sequences (Henningsmoen, 1957) and are the same as those recorded from the White-leaved Oak Shale of the Malvern area (Worssam et al., 1989). None of the Ctenopyge species is known from the measured section at Ogof Ddû, and the bisulcata Subzone has not yet been identified there with certainty. The fauna of the linnarssoni–lobata Subzone has species in common with the corresponding fauna from Ogof Ddû (Howells and Smith, 1997), but at Rhobell it includes the olenid Plicatolina (known from a single specimen) and lacks both brachiopods and the remopleuroid trilobite Ricbardsonella? invita (Salter) known from Ogof Ddû.
Belt's specimens are generally poorly localized and his publications state only that various of his species, such as Parabolinites? longispinus, williamsonii and Pseudagnostus obtusus, are from 'near Rhiw-felyn'
Conclusions
These localities reveal good faunas of trilobites of the Peltura scarabaeoides Zone, that were adapted to living in poorly oxygenated sea water such as characterized many areas during the later Cambrian. These faunas compare closely with others from parts of England, Wales and Scandinavia and allow an exact correlation.