Cleal, C.J., Thomas, B.A., Batten, D.J. & Collinson, M.E. 2001. Mesozoic and Tertiary Palaeobotany of Great Britain. Geological Conservation Review Series No. 22, JNCC, Peterborough, ISBN 1 86107 489 1. 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
Cloughton Wyke
Introduction
The beds of the Cloughton Formation (the 'Middle Deltaic Formation' of earlier authors) exposed in Cloughton Wyke are well known for their abundant well-preserved plant fossils. Over 70 species have been recorded. Common genera include the bennettitaleans Ptilophyllum and Otozamites and the fern Coniopteris. Among the more important members of the flora are Beania mamayi and Androstrobus wonnacottii, the female and male cones of Nilssonia tenuinervis. These three taxa have enabled a reconstruction of the parent cycad to be made. The site is of national importance, especially for systematic studies of gymnosperms.
The site has long been the subject of palaeobotanical research. Leckenby (1864) collected plant fossils from the Cloughton Wyke exposure in the early 19th century and many were figured and described by Phillips (1829, 1835). Later, Nathorst (1880) and Halle (1911) sampled here; their collections now being housed in the Natural History Museum, Stockholm. It is the type locality for a species of the ginkgophyte leaf genus Eretmophyllum, which was erected by Thomas (1913), and Kendall (1947, 1948) described shoots of the conifers Brachyphyllum and Pagiophyllum from here. However, the most extensive studies on the site were those of Harris (1943b, 1946a,b, 1948, 1951, 1952a,b, 1953), culminating in his monographs (Harris, 1961a, 1964, 1969, 1979a; Harris et al., 1974). More recently, the palaeobotany of the site has been investigated by van Konijnenburg-van Cittert (1981, 1987) and Morgans (1999).
Description
Stratigraphy
The stratigraphy of the section at Cloughton Wyke is summarized in
Two metres of sandstones dominate the middle part of the member. These display a wide range of sedimentary features, including horizontal to wavy lamination, wave-ripple cross-lamination, planar lamination and small-scale trough cross-lamination. The upper part of the Gristhorpe Member consists of about 7 m of channel sandstones, siltstones and mudstones with rootlet beds. These include the major lacustrine plant-rich beds at Cloughton Wyke. Above are sheet sands/sandstones of crevasse-splay origin, which dominate the middle part of the Gristhorpe Member (Livera and Leeder, 1981).
Harris (in manuscript) listed 17 separate plant fossil localities at Cloughton 'Wyke; these are summarized in
[GR added 2023] | |||
Black Shale B | 54°20'21" | 0°25'45" | |
Black Shale A | 54°20'25" | 0°25'51" | |
Equisetum Bed in waterfall | 54°20'25" | 0°25'51" | |
3 ft 6 ins [=1.1 m] shaky sandstone | 54°20'26" | 0°25'51" | |
Solonites Bed | 54°29'28" | 0°25'42" | |
Eretmophyllum Bed | 54°20'31" | 0°25'45" | |
Fern Bed | 54°20'36" | 0°25'40" | |
Pachypteris Bed (10 ft [ =3 m] sandstone) | 54°20'36" | 0°25'43" | |
Equisetum laterale Bed (9 ft [=2.7 m] sandstone) | 54°20'37" | 0°25'43" | |
quinqueloba Bed | |||
Coal Bed | 54°20'40" | 0°25'43" | |
Neocalamites Bed | |||
2 ft 6 ins [ = 0.8 ml Drifted Plant Bed | 54°20'50" | 0°25'47" | |
Phlebopteris Bed (fallen) | 54°20'51" | 0°25'48" | |
Base of Millipore Bed | 54°20'54" | 0°25'49" | |
Otozamites bunburyanus Bed | 54°20'55" | 0°25'49" | |
Zamites Bed | 54°20'54" | 0°25'49" | |
15 ft [= 5 m] below Millipore Bed | 54°20'55" | 0°25'49" | |
(Otozamites beanii) Nilssonia Bed | 54°20'56" | 0°25'49" |
Palaeobotany
The Cloughton Wyke plant beds have yielded 73 taxa (see
The Nilssonia Bed (discovered in the late 1940s or early 1950s by Wayne Fry and Serge Mamay) also contains abundant cycad remains, but this time it is the leaf Nilssonia tenuinervis (the only species here) and associated cones and bud scales.
The other beds yield much poorer assemblages although a few important finds have been made in them. For instance, the only remains of the fern Coniopteris margaretae have been found in the quinqueloba Bed of Harris along with C. simplex, C. murrayana, Hepaticites arcutus, Lycopodites falcatus, Nilssoniopteris pristis and Ginkgo longifolius. Van Konijnenburg-van Cittert (1987) reported abundant conifer remains from a loose block that probably originated from this bed.
The Zamites Bed, which is just above the Millipore Bed, is thought to be an autochthonous assemblage in which Zamites gigas is present along with masses of isolated leaves of Pagiophyllum masculosum, which in turn is associated with ovuliferous cone scales (Hirmeriella kendalliae) and huge numbers of Classopollis pollen grains.
Van Konijnenburg-van Cittert (1981, 1989) described the in-situ spores of Coniopteris margaretae, C. hymenophylloides, C. simplex, Klukia exilis, Kylikipteris arguta and Todites denticulatus from specimens collected from the Cloughton Wyke plant beds, and Morgans (1999) has recently described fragments of Cupressinoxylon spp. from woody horizons.
Interpretation
The Jurassic flora at Cloughton Wyke provides an important complement to the more diverse asssemblages from the Cloughton Formation at Red Cliff. Although there are some species unique to the site (Coniopteris margaretae, Cycadolepis eriophous) it is especially valuable for the associations of different plant organs, which help in the development of whole-plant reconstructions. For instance, abundant Solonites vimineus leaves in the Solonites Bed are associated with ovules of Leptostrobus cancer, which Harris has shown to occur together in six other Yorkshire localities. These are presumed to be biologically linked to the same czekanowskialean parent plant. There are some capsules here with relics of seeds and, although no complete seeds have yet been found, Harris suggested that a special search might prove worthwhile. In the same bed there are also associations between the cycad leaf Nilssonia tenuinervis and its supposed cone Androstobus wonnacottii; the bennettite leaf Ptilophyllum pecten and its supposed stem Bucklandia pustulosa; and Cycadolepis stenopus, the biologically related leaf Pterophyllum thomasii and the cones Williamsonia leckenbyi and Weltrichia pecten (numerous here in its type locality). There are also fine specimens of the conifer Elatides williamsonii, frequently with intact seeds.
The Nilssonia Bed is important because of the association of three cycad organs: the leaf Nilssonia tenuinervis (the only Nilssonia species present), the cone Beania mamayi and the bud scale Deltolepis calyptra. Harris found the scales only after a deliberate search, illustrating how important it is to realize which associated organs are worth looking for in any one site.
Van Konijnenburg-van Cittert (1987) collected good shoots of Pagiophyllum masculosum from the foot of the cliff to the south of the quinqueloba Bed. In close association was a female cone, Hirmeriella kendalliae, and three small pollen-producing cones, which she called Classostrobus cloughtonensis after the Classopollis pollen that it contained and the site from which it was recovered. This suggests that these organs can be linked to form the basis of a whole-plant reconstruction for one of the cheirolepidiacean conifers in the Yorkshire Jurassic strata.
An accumulation of abundant leaves almost entirely referrable to the pteridosperm Pachypteris lanceolata is present in the aptly called Pachypteris Bed. Although it has yet to be investigated in detail, a thorough search of this bed might well yield associated organs. The bennettite scale leaf Cycadolepis eriphous was found in fallen blocks along with Otozamites mimetes; this would also merit further investigation for evidence of additional association.
Cope et al. (1980a) interpreted the Millipore Bed as having been deposited as a southerly migrating strand line over the Sycarham Member and the overlying Yons Nab Beds as part of a pro-grading system of sand dune ridges separated by silt-dominated lagoonal deposits. They suggested that the environment was equally influenced by tides and waves. A thin coal with poor root foundation that can be seen in the basal shales was most probably formed by plant remains drifting into a lagoon. This lagoonal interpretation is supported by palaeobotanical data, the assemblages of well-preserved plants suggesting minimal transportation from a surrounding vegetation.
The Solonites Bed is the main plant bed at Cloughton Wyke. It contains a third of the species recorded for the site, which is more of a mixture of plants than is found in the other beds. Hence it is possible that some of these, such as Otozamites beanii, were not part of the immediate vegetation but were brought into the lagoon by a river. The lagoons must have gradually filled with sediment, Equisetum eventually colonizing the shallows and giving rise to beds now dominated by this pteridophyte.
Conclusion
Cloughton Wyke is a nationally important site for plants fossils of the Cloughton Formation. Within the varied assemblages there are many examples of organ associations that provide evidence for whole-plant reconstructions of the cycad Nilssonia, the bennettites Ptilophyllum and Pterophyllum, the czekanowskia Solonites, and the conifers Elatides and Pagiophyllum. It is also the type locality for 13 species, one of which, Cycadolepis eriophous, is known only from here.