Wright, J.K. & Cox, B.M. 2001. British Upper Jurassic Stratigraphy. Geological Conservation Review Series, No. 21, JNCC, Peterborough, ISBN 1 86107 482 4. 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
Cornelian Bay
J.K. Wright
Introduction
The cliff section at the southern end of Cornelian Bay, 50 m due west of the headland known as 'Osgodby Nab' (not 'Osgodby Point' as on the OS map) or 'Knipe Point'
Description
The Cornelian Bay exposure shows a continuous section through 8 m of Callovian strata and some 10 m of Oxfordian strata, which dip gently south-eastwards at the base of the low cliff. The basal Scarburgense Subzone of the Oxfordian Stage is present in very condensed facies
Thickness (m) | |
Oxford Clay Formation | |
Weymouth Member, Praecordatum Subzone | |
14. Grey, silty clay containing, in a thin band 1 m up, Cardioceras (Scarburgiceras) praecordatum Douvillé, Peltoceras (Peltoceratoides) arduennensis (d'Orbigny) and fossil wood seen | to 9 |
Scarburgense Subzone | |
13. Tough, medium-grey, fine silty clay with abundant black chamosite ooliths. Scarce ammonites include C. (S.) praecordatum and C. (S.) scarburgense (Young and Bird) | 0.10 |
12. Sticky, black clay | 0.02 |
11. Tough, medium-grey, fine silty clay with abundant black chamosite ooliths and a line of calcareous nodules containing well-preserved ammonites 0.05 m up. Contains Quenstedtoceras omphaloides (J. Sowerby), C. scarburgense, etc. | 0.18 |
10. Grey, slightly sandy shale with scattered green chamosite ooliths and a line of calcareous nodules 0.08 m up. Just below this occurs a band with frequent excellently preserved ammonites: C. (S.) scarburgense, Q. mariae (d'Orbigny), Q. aff. macrum (Quenstedt); also Gryphaea dilatata J. Sowerby, Chlamys fibrosus (J. Sowerby) and Pleuromya sp. | 0.20 |
Osgodby Formation | |
Hackness Rock Member, Lamberti Zone | |
9. Green, chamositic sand | 0.10 |
A log of the section is given in
Interpretation
The ammonites of Bed 10 consist solely of Boreal cardioceratids with no Tethyan forms present. Connections with the Tethyan seas to the south had yet to be established. The bivalves Gryphaea, Chlamys and Pleuromya indicate non-toxic bottom conditions favouring both infaunal and epifaunal suspension feeders. Sedimentation appears to have been in restricted basins, preventing ingress of elastic sediment. The silty clays of the overlying Praecordatum Subzone (Bed 14) represent the establishment of more open-water conditions over the whole area. Offshore shelf conditions predominated, with a limited benthic fauna but numerous free-swimming ammonites. Tethyan and Boreal forms are found in roughly equal proportions, Peltoceras, Aspidoceras and Taramelliceras representing the aforementioned, while the Boreal Cardioceras and Quenstedtoceras were joined by Goliathiceras.
Attenuation of the basal strata of the Oxfordian sequence on the Yorkshire coast probably represents a response to the effects of deep-seated tectonic movements affecting deposition near to the Market Weighton High, the northern edge of which lies only 15 km to the south (Kent, 1980a). The basal Oxfordian in much of northwest Europe is either thin or absent, there being a regional hiatus or lacuna at this horizon. In those areas affected by episodes of still-stand and erosion, the earliest Scarburgense Subzone faunas occur in small pockets of sediment found in hollows, and have been overlooked until recently (Wright, 1983).
The junction between the Oxfordian and Callovian stages was taken by George et al. (1969) between beds 9 and 10. However, subsequent to the choice of Cornelian Bay as the British stratotype section for the base of the Oxfordian, it has become apparent that the succession here may not be entirely complete. Wright (1983) records silty, sandy beds containing Quenstedtoceras paucicostatum (Lange) overlying the Lamberti Zone Hackness Rock at Gristhorpe Cliffs
This action does not detract from the importance of the Cornelian Bay site as one of the best localities in Britain at which the Callovian–Oxfordian junction can be examined.
Conclusions
The Cornelian Bay site provides one of the few sections in Britain where the comformable contact between basal Oxfordian Scarburgense Subzone rocks and the underlying Lamberti Zone beds of the Callovian sequence is well exposed and can be studied in detail. The base of the Weymouth Member of the Upper Oxford Clay is thinly developed, there being a regional hiatus present at the level of the highly condensed Scarburgense Subzone, which is only half a metre in thickness. This locality is important in palaeogeographical studies of this heavily faulted region north of the Market Weighton High, and is essential in elucidating the complex biostratigraphy of the Oxfordian of the Sub-Boreal Province.