Cossey, P.J., Adams, A.E., Purnell, M.A., Whiteley, M.J., Whyte, M.A. & Wright, V.P. 2004 British Lower Carboniferous Stratigraphy. Geological Conservation Review Series, No. 29, JNCC, Peterborough. 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
Bracelet Bay, Gower, West Glamorgan
Introduction
The Bracelet Bay GCR site
Description
Bracelet Bay lies on the hinge of the eastwards-plunging Langland Anticline (George, 1940) and exposes the higher part of the Holkerian Hunts Bay Oolite (Owen, 1971). On the southern limb of the fold, about 80 m of strata can be seen on the foreshore and in the low cliffs along the western side of the bay
About a third of the way up the succession, oncoidal packstones and wackestones with bands containing Composita ambigua are prominent
Interpretation
The Holkerian sequence records the establishment and southwards migration of a linear oolitic sand-belt orientated parallel with the contemporary shoreline, with sand-flat and lagoonal deposits occurring on the northern, landward, protected flanks of this sand-body (Ramsay, 1987). The oncoidal and bioclastic wackestones and packstones which dominate the upper part of the Hunts Bay Oolite, including those seen at Bracelet Bay, are interpreted as part of the barrier platform interior, bordering the lagoon, by Ramsay (1987).
The biostrome at Bracelet Bay contains chaetetid sponges that have been toppled over or inverted, but the rich faunal association of large sponges together with disarticulated but unfragmented brachiopods suggests that the assemblage has not been transported any great distance. Other bioherms are known from the Hunts Bay Oolite, including examples dominated by lithostrotionid corals, such as that exposed on Spaniard Rocks in the north-west of the peninsula (Ramsay, 1987), but biostromes dominated by Chaetetes are not known elsewhere on Gower.
Conclusions
Bracelet Bay offers one of the best and most accessible sections of the Hunts Bay Oolite in eastern Gower and is important for its well-exposed faunas, including a small biostrome characterized by Chaetetes. It also shows the muddier, lower energy facies of oncoidal and bioclastic limestones in the Hunts Bay Oolite, interpreted as back-barrier deposits.