Benton, M.J., Cook, E. & Turner, P. 2002. Permian and Triassic Red Beds and the Penarth Group of Great Britain. Geological Conservation Review Series, No. 24, JNCC, Peterborough, ISBN 1 86 107 493 X. 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
The Triassic red beds of west Cumbria and the East Irish Sea Basin
Introduction
The Irish Sea is the site of an extensive Permo-Triassic depositional basin. Indeed, Permo-Triassic sediments here occur mainly beneath the sea, and appear on shore only in small coastal outcrops, on the northern tip of the Isle of Man, along the Solway Firth, the coastal margin of Cumbria, and west Lancashire and on the Wirral Peninsula
The East Irish Sea Basin consists of eight or more constituent half-grabens, and the Keys Basin, lying midway between the Isle of Man and the Lancashire coast, preserves one of the thickest Triassic successions (4250 m) in the British Isles. After deposition of Permian sediments, there was rapid regional subsidence, accompanied by deposition of thick Triassic successions in the middle of the basins. These include some 1450 m of Sherwood Sandstone Group conglomerates and sandstones deposited in river systems and which include an important hydrocarbon reservoir unit. The Mercia Mudstone Group accumulated to an even greater thickness (3200 m); it includes five major halite units, that correlate with the succession in west Lancashire.
The Triassic succession in Cumbria is comparable with that in Dumfries and Galloway
The succession in the coastal areas of Cheshire, the Wirral, and North Wales also comprises mainly Lower and Middle Triassic units
Three GCR sites have been selected to represent the Triassic outcrop around the East Irish Sea, and they inevitably focus on the lower parts of the succession. The type location for the St Bees Sandstone Formation, St Bees in Cumbria, is an obvious choice. In the Wirral, the Burton Point section includes the Permo-Triassic Kinnerton Sandstone and the overlying Chester Pebble Beds formations, while Hilbre Island shows in extraordinary detail the sedimentary structures and trace fossils, including footprints of vertebrates, of the Ormskirk Sandstone Formation. Also on the Wirral Peninsula, Thurstaston is the best site in the region for the Thurstaston Member of the Helsby Sandstone Formation, and The Dungeon offers an excellent exposure of the Tarporley Siltstone Formation.
Burton Point, The Wirral, Cheshire
Hilbre Island and Hilbre Point, The Wirral, Cheshire