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
Helmsdale
B.M. Cox
Introduction
The Helmsdale GCR site spans c. 17 km of coastal exposures from near Kintradwell northeastwards to Dun Glas on the north-east coast of Scotland
Description
The Kimmeridgian outcrop, up to a kilometre wide, displays a complex array of boulder beds interdigitating with dark mudstones, siltstones and sandstones, which generally become younger to the north-east. Minor faults with throws of up to several metres are common and the whole succession has been deformed by simple open, gently plunging folds (Pickering, 1984; Barron, 1989). Three main lithostratigraphical units are recognized, the Kintradwell Boulder Beds (c. 85 m thick), overlain by the Allt na Cuile Sandstone Formation (c. 120 m) and then the Helmsdale Boulder Beds (c. 800 m) (Pickering, 1984; Wignall and Pickering, 1993). As defined by Pickering (1984), the Allt na Cuile Sandstone included the Loth River Shales of Brookfield (1976) and Lam and Porter (1977). Wignall and Pickering (1993) divided the Allt na Cuile Sandstone into four members: the Allt Choll Breccia, the Allt na Cuile Sand, the Loth Burn Siltstone and the Lothbeg Siltstone
At the southern end of the GCR site
Between the southern end of the GCR site and Lothbeg Point
Distinct burrows are not generally discernable but in some beds there is a vertical fabric probably representing Skolithos or Arenicolites. There are rare discrete shelly beds, mostly composed of fragmented bivalves, serpulids and echinoid spines. The lower beds of the member are seen again on the foreshore immediately south of the Loth Burn railway bridge where bioturbation is more clearly picked out because of the presence of carbonaceous plant material. Trace fossils include Rhizocorallium, Planolites, Monocraterion and Chondrites. At Lothbeg Point, the Allt na Cuile Sand comprises burrowed, clean sandstones with rare, thin, dark siltstones. These pass upwards into more structureless, thick-bedded sandstones with erosional-based sands and sand packets. The overlying Loth Burn Siltstone, comprising a series of lenticular sandstones less than 2 m thick interbedded with finely laminated, highly fissile siltstones, is seen in the banks of the Loth Burn on either side of the railway bridge. The fauna is mainly restricted to isolated nests of the bivalves Liostrea multiformis (Koch) and Buchia concentrica (J. de C. Sowerby), although Arkell and Callomon (1963) recorded an ammonite fauna of Amoeboceras and various 'raseniids'. At Lothbeg Point, a broad wave-cut platform exposes the Lothbeg Siltstone, which appears to be a lateral equivalent of the Loth Burn Siltstone but without the lenticular sandstones. The 30 m thick section is dominated by finely laminated and fissile, dark-grey siltstones with rare interbedded pale-grey mudstone laminae up to 2 mm thick. There are two horizons of giant carbonate-cemented concretions up to 0.4 m thick and 2 m in diameter, and a 3 m thick interval of sand and silt interbedded on a centimetre to millimetre scale (the 'tiger-stripe' facies), which shows wet-sediment deformation structures such as slump folds and small-scale synsedimentary faults. The ammonites Amoeboceras kitchini and Rasenia lepidula (Oppel) occur throughout much of the section, with Rasenia evoluta in the basal metre. The basal two metres of the Lothbeg Siltstone contain the bivalves Buchia concentrica, Liostrea multiformis and Parainoceramus. Plant fragments, dominated by ferns, cycads and conifer needles, are abundant in the siltstones.
There is a short gap in exposure north-east of Lothbeg Point but between Crackaig and Dun Glas
Near Dun Glas, the Helmsdale Fault itself is exposed on the foreshore near the mouth of Allt Briste. The rocks in the fault zone are intensely fractured, sheared and veined such that the original lithologies are hard to recognize.
Interpretation
According to Pickering (1984), the boulders in the Kintradwell Boulder Beds are probably derived from older Jurassic formations, such as the Callovian–Oxfordian Brora Arenaceous Formation, which were reworked in the littoral zone. The beds show abundant evidence of synsedimentary deformation and, according to Wignall and Pickering (1993), the Helmsdale Fault was active during their deposition although the rarity of older Jurassic clasts suggests that only a small part of the Jurassic succession was exposed on the fault scarp, and/or the earlier Jurassic sediments were not then lithified. A low-diversity bivalve fauna of Buchia concentrica and Liostrea multiformis in the siltstone matrix indicates oxygen-restricted conditions of deposition but where these taxa occur in a more diverse assemblage, including the bivalves Nicaniella cf. eathiensis (Waterston), Palaeonucula, Parainoceramus and Solemya cf. woodwardiana Leckenby, and the gastropod Semisolarium, almost normal bottom-water oxygen levels can be inferred. The presence of this latter assemblage in laminated sediments, which are typically associated with very low oxygen levels, suggests very high sediment accumulation rates. Rapid sedimentation is also indicated by the presence of small escape structures, probably of bivalves, at the lower contact between sandstone and siltstone beds (Wignall and Pickering, 1993).
Pickering's (1984) interpretation of the Allt na Guile Sandstone Formation as having accumulated in a large submarine canyon-channel incised into the slope associated with the Helmsdale Fault scarp has been accepted by all subsequent authors. Of these, Trewin (1990) suggested that the Allt Choll Breccia probably formed as a rockfall breccia at the base of the steep-walled proximal canyon. Wignall and Pickering (1993) agreed, in essence, with these ideas but suggested that the area between Allt Choll and Allt na Cuile, where the otherwise straight outcrop of the Helmsdale Fault is displaced by about 500 m to the south-east, may have been preferentially exploited as a conduit for the transport of sandy shelf sediments to the downfaulted basin. The accumulation of sediment, comprising amalgamated channel sand bodies that became gradually smaller down-dip, built out to the east for a distance of at least 2 km but Wignall and Pickering (1993) noted that there is no evidence to suggest a radially distributed and well-organized set of submarine fan environments that would warrant the use of the term 'fan'. The diverse trace-fossil suite in the lower beds indicates that bottom-water oxygen levels were initially normal but the rapid fining-upwards shown by the higher beds, associated with a drastic decline in oxygen values (inferred from the lack of benthos), probably indicates a deepening of the sea.
In the Helmsdale Boulder Beds, the boulder beds themselves show classic features of submarine debris-flow and rockfall-slide processes. According to Wignall and Pickering (1993), the 'fallen stack' at Portgower is most likely to have been emplaced by rockfall and downslope sliding only a few hundred metres from the submarine cliff. They interpreted those isolated boulders that did not sink into the finer-grained beds below them, as the product of non-depositing debris flows or as ejected 'out-runner' blocks at the snouts or lateral margins of debris flows. Sedimentary structures suggest that the sandstones of the Helmsdale Boulder Beds were deposited from turbidity currents, but the finely laminated siltstones represent sedimentation by several different processes, the main one being deposition from dilute, muddy, turbidity currents, with hemipelagic and pelagic background sedimentation. According to Wignall and Pickering (1993), the 'tiger-stripe' facies likewise results from episodic deposition from thin, probably dilute, sandy turbidity currents and muddy turbidity currents, with hemipelagic–pelagic background sedimentation. The fauna in the matrix of the boulder beds is considered to be allochthonous and indicates a shallow, fully oxygenated shelf environment west of the Helmsdale Fault; the presence of corals suggests warmth. The corals occur as isolated colonies, with no indication of the presence of reefs on the upthrown side of the fault. The dominance of sessile epifauna rather than vagile infauna suggests sediment-starved, stable substrate conditions where the influx of sand was fairly infrequent (Wignall and Pickering, 1993). On the other hand, the fauna of the laminated siltstones is considered to be autochthonous. Wignall and Pickering (1993) suspected that the main ways by which the usually anoxic bottom-waters became briefly sufficiently oxygenated to support an impoverished fauna was from occasional turbidity currents carrying warmer and more oxygen-rich water with the sediment from the shelf into deep water.
The ammonite faunas have never been comprehensively reported but the records, recently assessed by Wignall and Pickering (1993), are sufficient to establish a nearly complete Kimmeridgian zonal sequence, from the Lower Kimmeridgian Cymodoce Zone through to the oldest (Albani) zone of the Portlandian
Within the framework of the ammonite zonation, Wignall and Pickering (1993) presented a depositional history of the Kimmeridgian succession that started with deposition of the oldest Kimmeridgian strata (Kintradwell Boulder Beds and Allt na Cuile Sandstone) on the downthrown side of an already active Helmsdale Fault
Conclusions
The narrow outcrop of Kimmeridgian strata on the coast of north-east Scotland, which comprises the GCR site known as 'Helmsdale', is the most extensive Kimmeridgian outcrop in Britain apart from that on the Dorset coast (see Chapter 2). It shows a virtually complete Kimmeridgian zonal succession, including the youngest zones and the basal zone of the overlying Portlandian strata, which are otherwise known only in Dorset. It also provides one of the best examples of fault-controlled sedimentation in the British Mesozoic record. The Kimmeridgian beds were deposited at the western active margin of a major half-graben controlled by downthrow on the Helmsdale Fault. The succession provides good sedimentological analogues for several North Sea oilfields. Boulder beds and the millimetre- to centimetre-scale interbedded sandstones and siltstones known as 'tiger stripe' facies, comparable to those that characterize the coastal outcrop, are also known from boreholes in the Moray Firth, Witch Ground Graben and Viking Graben. The site is thus a most important one for sedimentological and stratigraphical studies, offering a 'window' on the economically important subsurface geology of the North Sea.