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
Solva Harbour
Introduction
Outcrops in the cliffs on either side of Solva Harbour expose rocks of the lower and middle Menevian Group (St David's Series, Middle Cambrian). These beds yield faunas indicative of the parvifrons Zone. This site supplements the Porth-y-rhaw site, and together they provide the best-documented faunal sequence in the British Middle Cambrian.
Cambrian rocks exposed in Solva Harbour range from the lower Solva Group up to the 'Lingula Flags', but the succession is disrupted by major faulting along the inlet, which displaces outcrops of lingula Flags' and truncates the igneous intrusions. The locality in the Menevian Group behind the lifeboat house was visited during the Geologists' Association excursion of 1930 (Cox et al., 1930b).
Description
On the north-west side of Solva Harbour
On the south-east side of the harbour, the sections in the Menevian Group occur below the same felsite sill, dipping south-west at about 45°. They consist of thinly bedded, olive-green and grey well-laminated mudstones, with paler layers showing signs of bioturbation. Pyritic layers and lenses, 1–2 mm thick, and phosphate nodules occur and are often associated. The rocks all have a greenish tinge and often appear spotted due to thermal alteration. Faunas similar to those cited above occur about 40 m below the base of the sill. At a higher level, about 20 m below the sill, Paradoxides davidis (Salter) has been found (Cox et al., 1930b), indicating the punctuosus Zone. Farther east the 'Lingula Flags' are well exposed (Rushton, 1974, pl. 2B).
Interpretation
The middle Menevian strata exposed in Solva Harbour closely resemble those seen in the type section at Porth-y-rhaw, and their depositional environments are considered to have been similar. However, the abnormal greenish colour of the rocks there is probably due to thermal alteration by a large felsite sill (Fearnsides in Cox et al., 1930b, p. 417). The continuous sequence from the parvifrons Zone into the punctuosus Zone resembles that seen at Porth-y-rhaw, and together the two sites form the best standard zonal scheme for correlation of the Middle Cambrian in Britain.
Conclusions
This site exposes easily accessible fossiliferous middle Menevian mudstones, complementing those of the parvifrons Zone at Porth-y-rhaw. They help to provide a standard for correlation of rocks of this age, both in Britain and abroad.