Carney, J.N., Horak, J.M., Pharaoh, T.C., Gibbons, W., Wilson, D., Barclay, W.J., Bevins, R.E., Cope, J.C.W. & Ford, T.D. 2000. Precambrian Rocks of England and Wales. Geological Conservation Review Series, No. 20, JNCC, Peterborough, ISBN 1 86107 4875. 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
Chapter 5 Shropshire, Radnor and Llangynog
Introduction
D. Wilson
The Precambrian rocks between Shropshire and Llangynog form a major network of GCR sites disposed in a series of inliers that are bounded by faults and unconformities associated with the major Church Stretton and Pontesford fault systems
The older of these is the Uriconian Group, which consists of rhyolitic lavas and associated pyroclastic rocks, with acid and basic intrusions, representing a style of highly explosive, subaerial volcanism. At the Wrekin GCR site, the volcanic rocks are juxtaposed with older schistose and gneissose rocks whose origins are conjectural, but which may in part represent fragments of an earlier Precambrian basement. The Uriconian rocks are overlain by clastic sedimentary sequences of the Longmyndian Supergroup, which represents one of the thickest continuous successions of latest Precambrian sedimentary rocks in southern Britain. These strata record a transition from marine to fluviatile environments and contain, at Ashes Hollow GCR site, several localities displaying fossils impressions (Chapter 8).
The smaller inliers at Old Radnor (Dolyhir and Strinds GCR site) and Llangynog are included here because they have strong lithological affinities with the sedimentary and volcanic sequences of Shropshire. The Stanner–Hanter inlier is unusual, however, in exposing plutonic rock suites. All of these outcrops are representative of rocks comprising the Wrekin Terrane
One of the most important aspects of the well-exposed Shropshire area is its highly complex structural history, in particular the evolution and significance of the major structures that affect Precambrian rocks. These include the Church Stretton and Pontesford fault zones (or 'lineaments') that form part of the Welsh Borderland Fault System (Woodcock and Gibbons, 1988), a long-lived crustal structure that controlled late Precambrian volcanism and sedimentation (Baker, 1973), and may represent a Gondwanan terrane boundary
Studies to constrain the age of the cleavage have been carried out on samples collected from various locations, including the Lightspout Hollow GCR site, and are based on the 40Ar/39Ar systematics of tectonic micas in deformed Longmyndian mudrocks (BGS, work in progress). The preliminary results suggest that this was probably not a Caledonian event, although it occurred rather later than the end-Avalonian (Cadomian) tectonic dismemberment of terranes that is documented to have occured in the period between 570 and 550 Ma farther west (Gibbons and Hora.lc, 1996). That event included the uplift of blueschists in Anglesey at 560–550 Ma (Dallmeyer and Gibbons, 1987; see also, Chapter 7 of this volume).
The twelve sites of this GCR network, shown in
Uriconian Group
The term 'Uriconian' was first applied by Callaway (1886) to the acid, intermediate and basic tuffs and lavas, intruded by granophyre and several dolerite dykes, that crop out at the Wrekin and Lilleshall Hill GCR sites. It was at the former site that Callaway (1879) demonstrated the unconformable nature of the Uriconian and Cambrian, on the basis of derived volcanic pebbles in the overlying Cambrian quartzite. However, it was not until Lapworth (1888) proved the existence of an early Cambrian fauna in the quartzites that a Precambrian age for the Uriconian volcanics along the Church Stretton Fault System was accepted. Even so, correlation of these 'Eastern Uriconian' rocks with the so-called 'Western Uriconian' along the Pontesford–Linley Fault System proved controversial (Callaway, 1882; Blake, 1890; Lapworth and Watts, 1910), and was only established when the structure of the Long Mynd was revealed as a major syncline (James, 1952, 1956). The disparate Uriconian outcrops are now generally considered to lie on opposing limbs of the syn cline, which is cored by sedimentary rocks of the Longmyndian Supergroup. The term 'Uriconian volcanic complex' was used for these rocks by Pauley (1986, 1991); however, although the sequence is as yet undivided it is well stratified and could, eventually, be amenable to further subdivision. The name 'Uriconian Group' (Pharaoh and Gibbons, 1994) is therefore preferred here.
The Uriconian rocks have been widely studied, as summarized in: Pocock et al. (1938); Greig et al. (1968); Dunning (1975) and Pharaoh and Gibbons (1994), and feature in a number of isotope investigations and plate-tectonic reconstructions of the British Isles (Baker, 1973; Thorpe, 1974; Patchett et al., 1980; Dewey, 1982; Thorpe et al., 1984; Pharaoh et al., 1987b; Piper and Strange, 1989; Tucker and Pharaoh, 1991). The lavas are largely potassic rhyolites and the intrusions include both basic and acidic types, with an important phase of intrusion represented by the Ercall Granophyre. The geochemistry of Uriconian lavas (Pharaoh et al., 1987b) suggests that there is a distinct compositional gap between the more basic (< 53 wt% SiO2) and intermediate to acid (> 60 wt% SiO2) compositions, indicating that volcanism was bimodal. Basic rocks show an overall geochemical pattern typical of within-plate basalts, although enrichment in certain rare-earth elements indicates a subduction-related component such as would be found in a volcanic arc environment. Current opinion (Pharaoh and Gibbons, 1994) is that the Uriconian rocks were erupted in a tectonic setting that was transitional between the two, such as a fault-controlled ensialic marginal basin within the Avalonian volcanic arc (Thorpe et al., 1984;
The eruptive age of the Uriconian Group has been subject to some debate (summarized by Pharaoh and Gibbons, 1994). A maximum age of eruption is given by a Rb-Sr metamorphic age of 667 ± 20 Ma from the Rushton Schists (Thorpe et al., 1984), which are in probable faulted contact with largely unmetamorphosed Uriconian volcanic rocks (Coppack, 1974). More reliable data has come from Patchett et al. (1980), who published a Rb-Sr whole rock isochron of 558 ± 16 Ma from acid tuffs within the Eastern Uriconian. This age has been generally confirmed by a U-Pb zircon date from a rhyolite lava near Leaton, in the Wrockwardine inlier
Longmyndian Supergroup
The Longmyndian Supergroup (Toghill and Schell, 1984) forms a sequence at least 6500 m thick dominated by sedimentary rocks. Its strata are mainly disposed in the Longmynd Syncline (James, 1956), a major eastward-facing isoclinal fold between the Pontesford–Linley and Church Stretton fault zones
The relationship between the Uriconian Group and Longmyndian Supergroup is not easily demonstrated owing to a lack of suitable sections, and the faulted nature of the Precambrian outcrop in the Welsh Borderlands. One of the more important sections where a contact is seen is the Lyd Hole GCR site, described below. The abundant volcanic fragments within the Longmyndian have been matched with Uriconian volcanic rocks, indicating that the latter was the source for much of the sediment. Work by James (1952, 1956) firmly established that Uriconian rocks underlie the Longmyndian east and west of the Long Mynd, a relationship that had previously been in dispute (cf. Callaway, 1882; Blake, 1890); more importantly, it confirmed that the main period of volcanism predated Longmyndian sedimentation. The possibility that the waning phase of Uriconian volcanic activity overlapped with Longmyndian sedimentation (Greig et al., 1968) is indicated by the sporadic occurrence of thin volcanic horizons within the Longmyndian succession, the most important of which are the 'Batch Volcanic Beds' (Cobbold, 1900), a group of intermediate felsic tuffs. It suggests that the Longmyndian sediments were derived from erosion of the Uriconian volcanic arc, and that no great time interval separated volcanism and sedimentation.
Perhaps the most important feature of the Longmyndian is its sedimentary evolution, from marine to fluviatile depositional environments, and the implications that follow for reconstructing the tectonic events that may have accompanied the waning phases of Uriconian magmatism. One of the most important sections is at the Ashes Hollow GCR site, where fossil impressions are also well displayed (Chapter 8). It demonstrates a major regressive sequence within the Stretton Group, revealing a transition from deep-water mudstones (Stretton Shale Formation), through progradational turbidites and subaqueous deltaic mudstones and siltstones in the middle and upper parts of the Burway Formation. The top of the Burway Formation is characterized by fluvial environments, represented by the Cardingmill Grit (Pauley, 1990a). Fluviatile, sandstone-dominated facies characterize the later parts of the Stretton Group, with alluvial floodplain environments commencing in the Synalds Formation. In this formation the occurrence of the Batch Volcanic Beds, best seen at The Pike and Long Batch–Jonathan's Hollow GCR sites, represents the youngest record of volcanic activity contemporary with Longmyndian sedimentation. The sandstone component thickens upwards through the Lightspout Formation, reflecting deposition by multiple sheetflood events, but at the Lightspout Hollow GCR site there is evidence for an upwards transition into strata indicative of braidplain deposits.
A marked change in sedimentation occurred at the junction between the Stretton Group and overlying Wentnor Group, as described at the Hawkham Hollows GCR site. The change from alluvial floodplain sedimentation in the Portway Formation, to the deposition of braidplain conglomerates in the Bayston–Oakswood Formation, basal Wentnor Group, is an abrupt one that has been linked to rejuvenation of the source area by movements along the Church Stretton Fault Zone (Pauley, 1990b).
Coomb Volcanic Formation and Johnston Diorite Complex
The Coomb Volcanic Formation, described at the Llangynog site (see
Although the Coomb Volcanic Formation as yet remains undated, the presence of Ediacaran faunas within associated sedimentary rocks at Coed Cochion (Chapter 8) provides a possible parallel with similar fossils from the Eastern Avalonian, Mistaken Point Formation in Newfoundland. These have a minimum age constraint provided by overlying rhyolitic tuffs dated at 565 ± 3 Ma (Benus, 1988). As a Uriconian rhyolite from Shropshire has yielded a date of 566 ± 2 Ma (see above), and the Coomb Formation and Uriconian are geochemically very similar (Bevins et al., 1995), there seem strong grounds for correlating the two.
Stanner–Hanter Complex
The intrusive rocks of this igneous complex form part of the chain of Precambrian inliers localized along the Church Stretton Fault System
Another component of the Wrekin Terrane, the Johnston Diorite Complex
Metamorphic rocks
These rocks constitute the Rushton Schist and Primrose Hill Gneiss and Schist