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
Llyn Padarn
Potential GCR site
A.J. Reedman
Introduction
Llyn Padarn is situated within an area of spectacular scenery on the fringes of Snowdonia. It has been selected for the GCR independently for its Cambrian stratigraphy and is proposed as a Precambrian site because of its particularly good exposures of the Arfon Group, and also because of its accessibility (Howells et al., 1985; Reedman et al., 1984). These rocks crop out extensively on the south-eastern side of the Menai Strait between Caernarfon and Bangor, as shown in
Outcrops of the Arfon Group are restricted to North Wales in the vicinity of the Menai Strait and both geophysical and outcrop evidence suggest that the group thins rapidly to the southeast, where it is covered by the Lower Palaeozoic sequences of Snowdonia. Little therefore is known of its original lateral extent beneath these younger rocks towards central Wales. The Bryn-teg borehole (Allen and Jackson, 1978), however, penetrated through the Cambrian cover strata in the Harlech Dome region
Little geochemical detail is available for the Arfon Group, but data were presented by G. Hornung and A. Gray (in Allen and Jackson, 1978) for the equivalent Bryn-teg Volcanic Formation. Using a selection of the less alteration-prone trace elements, they showed that these rocks were part of a 'calc-alkaline island arc succession' that can be correlated with similar rocks in the Avalonian sequences of Newfoundland.
The late Precambrian age of the Padarn Tuff Formation was confirmed by a U-Pb determination of 614 Ma ± 2 Ma on rocks collected from an exposure near the outlet of Llyn Padarn, south of Bryn yr efail village
Description
The Padarn Tuff Formation crops out extensively in numerous ice-moulded hillocks on the slopes rising to the north-east and south-west from the shores of Llyn Padarn
The welding foliation is clearly visible in many of the outcrops around Llyn Padarn and generally dips at between 40° and 60° to the northwest, though the dip decreases and becomes more variable at the north-western end of the lake. A particularly good locality to view the welding foliation is in an old road cutting on the south-western shore of the lake, close to its north-western end
The most striking impression gained from an examination of the many outcrops of the Padarn Tuff Formation around Llyn Padarn is of its great uniformity of composition and texture. Furthermore, the overall north-westward dip of the welding foliation indicates that these tuffs accumulated to a great thickness, estimated to be at least 800 m in the vicinity of Llyn Padarn.
The Fachwen Formation occurs to the east of the Padarn Tuff Formation, its crop crossing the central part of Llyn Padarn. Locally its basal beds are seen overlying the Padarn Tuff Formation, either disconformably or unconformably, but commonly it is in faulted contact with the welded tuffs of the Padarn Tuff Formation. The basal strata are normally clast-supported conglomerates of angular to subrounded pebbles, cobbles and blocks of welded and non-welded acidic tuff and felsite. These are enclosed in a matrix of resorbed and hollow quartz and feldspar crystals, fine lithic grains and recrystallized vitric debris. Rounded clasts of basalt, jasper, quartzite, granite, siltstone and quartzose schist are rare near the base of the conglomerates, but become increasingly abundant in the upper part.
Near Llyn Padarn the conglomerates form wedges up to 150 m thick which grade, both laterally and vertically, into coarse-grained, cross-bedded sandstones composed predominantly of quartz and feldspar crystals and grains of acidic tuff. At several localities a thin, welded, acidic ash-flow tuff is intercalated within the basal part of the formation.
Fine- to coarse-grained clastic sedimentary rocks, containing much reworked volcanic debris, make up the bulk of the rest of the formation. Lateral and vertical variation is rapid, but generally near Llyn Padarn, above the sandstones and conglomerates, the middle part of the sequence is dominated by laminated tuffaceous siltstones and tuffites, with sandstones becoming more abundant in the upper part.
The formation thickens markedly from east to west north of Llanberis; on Gant y Foel
Interpretation
The great thickness and the homogeneity of the Padarn Tuff Formation indicates rapid accumulation from pyroclastic flows restricted in a topographical depression. The current geometry of the formation suggests that the depression was a NE-trending graben, or half-graben, bounded on the west by the Dinorwic Fault. The voluminous eruption of ash-flow tuffs and the collapse of the fault-bounded depression were probably genetically linked.
A pronounced Bouguer gravity anomaly low, approximately coincident with the outcrop of the Padarn Tuff Formation, was originally described by Powell (1955) and subsequently modelled by Reedman et al. (1984). It provides additional evidence for the previous existence of an extensive topographical depression in which up to 2 km thickness of acid tuffs accumulated. This depression, some 15 km wide and possibly as much as 60 km long, can be compared to the Toba volcano-tectonic depression in Sumatra, Indonesia, a collapse structure associated with the voluminous eruption and accumulation of acidic ash-flow tuffs.
Following the accumulation of the ash-flow tuffs of the Padarn Tuff Formation, continued differential subsidence and uplift, accompanied by sporadic volcanism, erosion and the accumulation of a thick sequence of volcaniclastic sediments, characterized the further development of the Arfon Basin (Reedman et al., 1984). In the east, lenses of conglomerate and coarse sandstone at the base of the Fachwen Formation represent alluvial fans and fluvial deposits that probably accumulated close to the fault system at the eastern margin of the structure, which restricted the Padarn Tuffs. Although acid tuff clasts predominate in these basal beds, rounded clasts of more distant provenance are also present. The Fachwen Formation conglomerates rest either disconformably or unconformably upon eroded ash-flow tuffs of the Padarn Tuff Formation. Around Llyn Padarn, variations in the angular relationships at these contacts take place abruptly across faults, suggesting rotation of the fault blocks prior to, and perhaps during, sedimentation.
To the west of Llyn Padarn, between Bangor and Caernarfon, there are extensive outcrops of the Arfon Group separated from the Llyn Padarn outcrops by the Aber-Dinlle Fault and an intervening tract of Ordovician strata (Bangor Sheet, 106). Here, in ascending order, the Arfon Group comprises: the Padarn Tuff the Bangor and the Minffordd formations (Reedman et al., 1984; Howells et al., 1985). Around Bangor, the Minffordd Formation comprises conglomerates, sandstones, acid tuffs and tuffites, and rare basic tuffites. The higher beds in the formation display a westward overlap on to the Padarn Tuff Formation adjacent to the Dinorwic Fault, indicating continued fault activity which was accompanied by erosion of the Padarn Tuff Formation. As in the Padarn area, the polymict, ill-sorted, massive conglomerates are interpreted as small fans that accumulated adjacent to contemporaneous fault scarps. The Bangor Formation, restricted to a small area near Bangor (Reedman et al., 1984), comprises similar lithologies to the Minffordd and Fachwen formations.
The distribution and composition of epiclasts in the conglomerates and sandstones of the Minffordd, Fachwen and Bangor formations reflect uplift and progressive stripping of the volcanic cover in the region adjacent to the basin. Initially, volcaniclastic debris of the Fachwen Formation was mainly derived from the irregularly faulted surface of the Padarn Tuff Formation within the basin, though in the east clasts of both metamorphic rocks and of basalt are found. The former are possibly derived from the pre-Arfon basement in the east and the latter from basalts locally erupted onto the Padarn Formation surface as at Coed Glanyrafon
In contrast to the Arfon Group, the Precambrian rocks in the Bryn-teg borehole show a style of magmatism that gave rise to basic and intermediate volcanic products, most of the pyroclastic rocks being of basic composition. The depositional environment is believed to have been subaqueous (Allen and Jackson, 1978). Nothing is known of their lateral extent, but it is possible that both the Arfon Group and Bryn-teg Formation represent the broadly synchronous expression of volcanism and sedimentation dominated by contrasting volcanic centres within an extensive late Precambrian volcanic province.
Conclusions
The extensive outcrops of the Arfon Group are important for illustrating the development of a voluminous late Precambrian volcanic episode in the Cymru Terrane