Lawson, J.D. and Weedon, D.S. (Eds.) 1992. Geological Excursions around Glasgow & Girvan. Geological Society of Glasgow. This material is part of the series of excursion itineraries published by the Geological Society of Glasgow. Find out more on the Geological Society of Glasgow website.
Excursion 4 Baldernock and Blairskaith
Key details
Authors | Judith Lawson and James D. Lawson |
Theme | Sediments and fossils of the Lower Limestone Group (Carboniferous) and the environments of the time. |
Features | Dolerite sills, waterfalls, coal seams, various limestones, stoop and room mining, desiccation cracks, flake breccias, ironstone nodules, black mudstones, nearshore shallow-water features, fossils and their ecology, Blackhall Limestone, Neilson Shell Bed. |
Maps | O.S. 1: 50 000 Sheet 64 Glasgow; O.S. 1: 25 000 Sheet NS 47/57 Milngavie; B.G.S. 1: 63 360 Sheet 30 Glasgow |
Terrain | Hummocky grass with muddy paths and potentially slippery rock at Baldernock; very muddy at Blairskaith after rain. |
Distance | A few hundred metres at Baldernock and up to half a kilometre in the quarry at Blairskaith–providing transport is available. |
Time | An hour is enough at Baldernock but at least two hours is needed at Blairskaith. |
Access | At Baldernock cars can be parked on the adjacent road and access is open. There is also no restriction on access to Blairskaith Quarry at the moment, but there is a barrier across the road which leads past the quarry. If a large number of cars are being used the present residents at the house are very co-operative about unlocking the gate. One or two cars can be safely parked at the roadside near the farm and there is room for one coach (preferably not too large), which should approach via Bardowie to avoid tight bends. Public transport is not convenient for this excursion and would add considerably to the walking distance, but there are occasional buses to Bardowie and Balmore to the south of these localities. |
Locality 1. Linn of Baldernock [NS 591 758]
In the stream section at the Linn of Baldernock is a good section through the lowest part of the Lower Limestone Group. Dolerite sills belonging to the Milngavie group have intruded into the sediments and generally form the series of waterfalls, or lhms. The benches are formed by the baked sediments,
Locality 2. Blairskaith Quarry (parking place south of quarry at [NS 595 752]
This abandoned brick pit exposes the Blackhall Limestone and black mudstones of the Lower Limestone Group. The strata are of approximately the same age as the limestones and shales of Trearne Quarry (Excursion 20) and are also exposed at Corrie Burn (Excursion 6). They display a striking contrast in facies and conditions of deposition to the rocks at Trearne.
A sketch of the quarry is provided in
Spreads of similar feeding remains have been interpreted as shark vomit, which is common in modern seas–although diarrhoea would presumably give the same result! The top of the limestone, however, is a fully marine limestone composed mainly of small crinoid colunmals. It is best examined on the extensive top bedding surface at c (and also at e). Other fossils are also small e.g. solitary corals of zaphrentid type and the brachiopods Crurithyris, Chonetes and productids
The black mudstones ('blaes') below the Blackhall Limestone are fine-grained organic-rich sediments with very few fossils and are considered to be dominantly non-marine deposits, perhaps from a large sluggish river system.
Ironstone nodules of various sizes are common; these are mostly of iron carbonate composition. Some of them show septarian structures i.e. internal shrinkage cracks infilled with walls (i.e. septa) of mineral precipitate, usually calcite. The nodules often show evidence of having been exhumed, eroded and resedimented indicating early formation and subsequent modification in nearshore conditions.
The black mudstones above the limestone are lithologically similar and also contain courses of ironstone nodules; some are tiny enough to be mistaken for goniatites and others are septarian nodules. However these upper mudstones contain a large and interesting marine fauna occurring in bands at various levels, mainly in the lower parts. They can be conveniently studied at a small exposure at d near the road but if enough time is available there are large exposures at f, e and b. This fossiliferous division is called the Neilson Shell Bed and has been fully described by Wilson (1966) and traced by him over most of the Midland Valley at this level. Most of the shells are complete and not compressed but they are mostly small and the same dark colour as the containing sediment, making them difficult to find until one gets the eye accustomed. Once a good layer is found it is wise to collect large blocks for processing at home.
Bivalves are common, particularly nuculids (e.g. Nucula, Polidevcia in
Brachiopods are less common. The tolerant Lingula
Layers composed of spherical foraminifera are not uncommon. Fish scales and other remains have been found at all levels: Watsonichthys was recently recovered from the nodular mud-stones above the Neilson Shell Bed.
The combined evidence from the sediments and fossils in the Neilson Shell Bed suggests a shallow, quiet sea bottom rich in organic mud but with sufficient oxygen to support a fairly varied fauna of mainly small organisms including shallow burrowers, browsers, epifaunal filter feeders and swimming predators.
Dr C.J. Burton considers that the preponderance of gastropods and bivalves, together with the limited diversity of the fauna in general, suggests that 1) conditions were less than fully marine (marine marginal and river influenced) and 2) the faunas were in part opportunistic. They resemble modem delta-edge faunas occupying rich mud layers after the river activity has switched elsewhere.
References
CLOUGH, C.T. et al. 1925. The geology of the Glasgow District. Mem. Geol. Surv. U.K.
WILSON, R.B. 1966. A study of the Neilson Shell Bed, a Scottish Lower Carboniferous marine shale. Bull. Geol. Surv. G.B. 24, 105–128.