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
Llanddwyn Island
W. Gibbons
Introduction
This site, a narrow, tidal isthmus projecting south-west from the Anglesey coastline, exposes some of the best examples of oceanic basaltic pillow lavas in Great Britain. It is the type locality
In addition to the lavas, there are various sedimentary rocks that include sandstones, shales, superb red jaspery cherts and prominent manganiferous limestones that are commonly mixed with the dark basalts to produce spectacular lava-limestone breccias. The age of the red cherts that are associated with the Gwna basalts on Llanddwyn Island has been the subject of controversy ever since possible Cambrian microfossils were discovered in them (Muir et al., 1979; Barber and Max, 1979; Barber et al., 1981; Peat, 1984b; Gibbons et al., 1994).
Description
Llanddwyn Island comprises a series of mostly steeply dipping to vertical lavas, limestones and other sedimentary rocks that form successive NNE–SSW-oriented outcrops running the length of the isthmus. The pillow structures in the lavas are commonly slightly deformed and cut by carbonate veins, but nevertheless are superbly preserved in many exposures, commonly showing interstitial jasper and central vacuoles. Notable, and readily accessible, exposures include those near high water mark on the beach north of the island
Interpretation
This site is excellent for demonstrating the nature of basaltic pillow lavas, erupted on the sea bed as is well established by observation of modern examples. The oceanic geochemistry of the pillow lavas (Thorpe, 1972c), and the likelihood that the Llanddwyn jaspers represent deep-sea chert, have fuelled interpretation of these rocks in terms of a palaeo-subduction zone (Wood, 1969). Barber et al. (1981), who speculated that an unconformity exists between the Llanddwyn Spilitic Formation and the Tyfry Formation, developed this idea. According to such an interpretation, the lenticular outcrops of basaltic lava and associated breccias represent slices of ocean floor imbricated within an accretionary prism in the hanging wall of a subduction zone. The upward-facing sandstones of the Tyfry Formation might then be interpreted as deposited in basins on top of this accretionary prism. The origin of the lava-limestone breccias has not been resolved, although these exposures have a direct bearing on the conflicting 'tectonic versus olistostrome' interpretations of Greenly (1919) and Shackleton (1954). The report of supposedly Cambrian microfossils from Llanddwyn Island (Muir et al., 1979) has proven controversial (Peat, 1984b), and the age of the Llanddwyn Spilitic Formation remains uncertain, although presumably it is either Precambrian or Cambrian.
Conclusions
The graphic exposures of steeply dipping jaspery pillow lavas at the Llanddwyn Island GCR site rank among the best of such examples preserved in Great Britain; indeed the site is the type locality for these rocks. This, combined with the spectacularly colourful mixtures of lava and limestone, makes these exposures truly exceptional. The site has also been at the centre of controversy over the age of the pre-Arenig rocks on Anglesey since it provides important (although unconfirmed) evidence for a Cambrian rather than Precambrian age for the Gwna lavas.