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
Cross Roads Quarry
J.K. Wright
Introduction
This quarry lies in the once heavily quarried Headington area of Oxford
Description
Three major stratigraphical units have been recognized in the 7 m succession of Corallian rocks recorded at this site. Present exposure does not permit all of Arkell's (1927) observations to be verified as the basal unit in the quarry, the Beckley Sand Member, is not currently exposed. The following section was measured by the present author at the southern end of the quarry. Details of the Beckley Sand Member are taken from Arkell (1927):
Thickness (m) | |
Stanford Formation | |
Wheatley Limestone Member | |
4. Massive, rubbly-weathering, bioclastic limestone, a coral–shell sand with coral clasts up to 5 mm diameter, and occasional transported masses of Thamnasteria concinna (Goldfuss) bored by Lithophaga inclusa (Phillips) | seen to 1.0 |
3. Rubbly-weathering, bioclastic limestone packed with coral clasts, up to 10 mm diameter in the lower part, becoming finer grained upwards | seen to 2.3 |
(not exposed — ?Wheatley Limestone — 2.2 m) | |
Kingston Formation | |
Beckley Sand Member | |
(2. Headington Shell Bed | 0.3) |
(1. Soft sand seen to | 1.2) |
Though there was at one time a substantial exposure here of the Headington Shell Bed, Arkell (1927) does not refer to it, and it is unlikely the bed was visible in Arkell's day. However, it is very likely that many of the ammonites in museums located simply as 'Headington' came from this quarry. The following ammonites are listed by Arkell (1935–1948) as occurring in the shell bed at Headington (i.e. not specifically at Vicarage or Magdalen quarries, these being listed below; see site report for Magdalen Quarry, this volume):
Perisphinctes (Dichotomosphinctes) rotoides Ronchadzé, P (Arisphinctes) maximus (Young and Bird), P (A.) cotovui Simionescu, P (A.) pickeringius (Young and Bird), Cardioceras (Cuneicardioceras) cuneiforme Arkell, C. (Subvertebriceras) densiplicatum Boden, C. (S.) zenaidae Ilovaisky, C. (Vertebriceras) dieneri Neumann and Goliathiceras titan Arkell.
Rubbly, thick-bedded Wheatley Limestone containing large coral clasts occurs at the southern end of the quarry. In the central and northern sectors of the face, thinly bedded limestone with smaller coral clasts predominates
Interpretation
The Vertebriceras and Goliathiceras recorded here from the Headington Shell Bed are indicators of the Vertebrale Subzone. The perisphinctids could indicate either Vertebrale Subzone or Antecedens Subzone (the latter approximately equivalent to the Maltonense Subzone). Evidence from Magdalen Quarry (see below) suggests that the Maltonense Subzone is present at Cross Roads Quarry, and it is likely that the Headington Shell Bed here encompasses in its 0.3 m both Vertebrale and Maltonense Subzones (Callomon, 1960).
The Wheatley Limestone is present here in its coarse-grained coralliferous facies proximal to coral reefs. True Coral Rag with large coral masses was exposed only 500 m to the south at Windmill Quarry
Away from the reef margin, in the central and northern parts of the section
Insalaco (1996) noted that the growth rate of corals in the Oxford reef, as measured by annual growth bands, was much less that that of corals of equivalent age in France. He attributed this to the adverse effects of a larger amount of run-off affecting the Oxford reef from the nearby London Landmass.
Conclusions
This is a key site in palaeogeographical reconstructions and facies analysis of the Oxfordshire coral reefs of late Jurassic (Oxfordian) age. The complete transition from broken marginal reef to comparatively fine-grained coral–shell sand may be observed here.