Barclay, W.J., Browne, M.A.E., McMillan, A.A., Pickett, E.A., Stone, P. & Wilby, P.R. 2005. The Old Red Sandstone of Great Britain. Geological Conservation Review Series No. 31, 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
North Esk River, Aberdeenshire
R.A. Smith
Introduction
The North Esk River section in the Gannochy Gorge
Description
The North Esk River cuts through the Strathmore Group on the steep north-west limb of the Strathmore Syncline. To the north of the site, poorly exposed, reddish brown siltstones and poorly sorted fine- to medium-grained, argillaceous sandstones are correlated with the coarser-grained facies of the Cromlix Mudstone Formation, which is truncated against the Highland Boundary Fault. The Cromlix Mudstone Formation is the basal formation of the Strathmore Group and because it is relatively soft it is generally poorly exposed. To the south, the formation passes conformably up into the 250 m-thick Gannochy Conglomerate Formation, which is more resistant and forms the northern part of the gorge.
The sandstones and conglomerates upstream of Gannochy Tower
The clast-supported conglomerates of the Gannochy Conglomerate Formation
The Teith Sandstone Formation forms the bulk of the gorge section and is relatively coarse-grained, containing several thick conglomerates within red-brown sandstones and mudstones. The sandstones are commonly trough cross-bedded, pebbly to medium-grained and include large detrital micas. Red mudstone beds up to 2.5 m thick and dipping about 60° to the southeast are well exposed about 230 m north of Gannochy Bridge. The conglomerate interbeds are polygenetic and although quartzite is the most common pebble type, vein quartz, porphyry, andesite, granite, gneiss, felsite and sedimentary types are also present (MacGregor, 1968, 1996b). The overlying part of the Teith Sandstone Formation south of Gannochy Tower, and about 270 m downstream from Gannochy Bridge, consists of mainly fine- to medium-grained, red sandstones, with some coarse-grained to pebbly sandstones with mudstone intraclasts. The beds dip about 30° to the southeast. Some of the finer-grained sandstones are cross-bedded or ripple cross-laminated, and there are thick, planar-bedded, silty sandstones with very thin mudstone interbeds (Carroll, 1995c).
Interpretation
The sequence of sandstones and conglomerates north of Gannochy Tower was originally placed in the Garvock Group (Campbell, 1913), but Armstrong and Paterson (1970) re-assigned it to the Strathmore Group on structural grounds, considering its position on the north-west limb of the Strathmore Syncline. The Strathmore Group exposed in Gannochy Gorge is coarser grained than that on the south-east side of the Strathmore Syncline, probably due to its proximity to the source of the detritus to the north.
The depositional environment of the Cromlix Mudstone Formation has been inferred from exposures at Mid Mains of Balfour
Haughton and Bluck (1988) recognized two alluvial styles in the Strathmore Group. Fine-grained alluvium was deposited in axial systems by very large rivers that probably drained areas of Scandian uplift. First-cycle conglomerates were deposited in fans dose to the Highland Boundary Fault and derived from the north-west. The textural immaturity of the conglomerates suggests flash-flood deposition. The Strathfinella Hill Conglomerate Member, which crops out to the north-east, contains clasts of metamorphic rock of garnet- and higher grades. Haughton and Bluck (1988) related these grades to the Barrovian zones in the adjacent Dalradian rocks of the Grampian Highland Terrane, to the northwest, inferring little displacement on the Highland Boundary Fault since Emsian times. Comparison of Lower Old Red Sandstone sequences immediately to the north and south of the Highland Boundary Fault (Bluck, 2000) suggests that the Grampian Highland Terrane pushed southwards, either during or after Lower Old Red Sandstone deposition, effectively removing the northern part of the Strathmore Basin and generating the steep northern limb of the Strathmore Syncline.
Peacock (1961) suggested that significant uplift of the source area caused the influx ofconglomerates of the Gannochy Conglomerate Formation and noted a decrease in its maturity upwards (MacGregor, 1968, 1996b). The upper, less mature conglomerates contain gneisses (about 25%), as well as 'porphyry', 'granite' and sedimentary pebbles, presumed to have been derived from the highlands to the north. Armstrong and Paterson (1970) considered that the Gannochy Conglomerate Formation continued north-eastwards to link with the Strathfinella Hill Conglomerate Member, but detailed mapping by Carroll (1995c) indicates that they are the deposits of separate alluvial fans. The Lintrathen Tuff Member (Dunnottar–Crawton Group), which is exposed in a faulted wedge within the Highland Boundary Fault Zone farther north in the North Esk River section, also occurs to the north-west of the fault zone. Its presence there has been interpreted (Trench and Haughton, 1990) as confirmation that only a limited amount of lateral movement on the Highland Boundary Fault has occurred since the tuff erupted at 415.5 ± 5.8 Ma (Thirlwall, 1988).
Conclusions
The North Esk River GCR site is the best-exposed section through the Strathmore Group on the north-western side of the Strathmore Syncline and the type section for the Gannochy Conglomerate Formation. It provides good exposures of the conglomerate formation, as well as the underlying and overlying finer-grained formations. The pebbles in the conglomerate are mainly from the Grampian Highland Terrane to the north-west, in contrast to the older Lower Old Red Sandstone rocks sourced from more distant areas of Scandian uplift. The depositional model envisaged for these sedimentary rocks comprises an interplay of a large, axially draining alluvial system flowing to the south-west and the lateral build up of alluvial-fans draining southeast across the Highland Boundary Fault Zone during Emsian times. Because of its proximity to the clastic source, the fades of the Strathmore Group in this section is coarser grained than that on the south-east limb of the Strathmore Syncline. Detailed sedimentological and provenance studies at the site, compared to studies at Strathfinella, would test this simple model and provide important data on fault control on sedimentation and the timing of exhumation of the Grampian Highland Terrane.