Scrutton, C. (Ed.) 1995. Northumbrian Rocks and Landscape. A Field Guide. 216 pp. Maryport: Ellenbank Press for the Yorkshire Geological Society. ISBN 1873551 118.
13 The Magnesian Limestone between South Shields and Seaham
Denys Smith GEOPERM and University of Durham
Purpose
To examine the Permian rocks in the coastal area of County Durham (including Tyne & Wear) and to interpret their mode of origin.
Logistics
This excursion occupies one full day (or two half days) and takes a minimum of 8 hours, including a 1-hour lunch break. All the exposures are close to roads and parking is available nearby. About 25 km travelling, some urban, is involved between the first and last stops. Parts of the coastal sections are not accessible at high tides.
Maps
O.S. 1:50 000 Sheet 88 Tyneside & Durham; B.G.S. 1:50 000 Sheet 21 Sunderland.
Geological background
The highly varied rocks to be seen on this excursion were all formed during the last few million years of the Permian Period and comprise the Yellow Sands Formation and the internationally known and spectacular Magnesian Limestone. The sequence is shown in
Most of the Permian Period in northwest Europe, including County Durham, was dominated by erosion, uplift and reddening of Carboniferous and earlier rocks that had been faulted and gently folded by the late Carboniferous Variscan earth movements. During this time, perhaps for 40 Ma, the region drifted slowly northwards from the wet equatorial belt to the dry trade wind belt, where it formed part of one of the great deserts of world history. A mature desert land surface — a peneplain, now represented by the unconformity — and the patchy aeolian Yellow Sands (?360–355 Ma old), are all that remains of this prolonged episode.
Subsidence of a broad belt extending from the ancestral Pennines eastwards to Lithuania and Poland created a vast inland drainage basin during the desert phase. A dramatic change of scene late in the Permian period took place when the Boreal Ocean, perhaps following a glacioeustatic sea-level rise, broke in from the north, flooding the inland desert basin and instantly (in geological terms — perhaps 5 to 15 years) forming the tropical Zechstein Sea. The middle of this sea was probably initially 200–300 m deep, but was almost completely filled with salts by the end of the period.
The thick and variably fossiliferous Magnesian Limestone of the Durham coastal cliffs was formed on the gentle shallow submarine slopes near the western margin of the Zechstein Sea during the last 5 to 7 Ma of the Permian. The sequence in the cliffs and adjoining inland areas is divided into five major carbonate formations that are grouped into three main cyclic units
The geographical distribution of the main formations of the Magnesian Limestone in northern coastal Durham is shown in
Excursion details
Locality 1 [NZ 384 667] , Trow Point (S.S.S.I., no hammering), South Shields (1 hour)
Park in Trow Lea car park
Locality 2 [NZ 385 641] , Cleadon Park Quarry, northeast corner (30 mins)
Park in Quarry Lane, near the junction with Larch Avenue; the face is adjacent. Keep within 100 m of the road. This 3–5 m vertical face is in about the middle of the Concretionary Limestone Formation. Most of the rock is finely laminated unfossiliferous spherulitic limestone but a few thin graded beds are present and these contain moulds of the bivalves Liebea and Schizodus. The spherulites were formed by the recrystallization of the rock whilst it was deeply buried, and are up to about 8 cm across. Some have been slightly rotated and fractured by dissolution. Small patches of buff powdery dolomite lie between many of the spherulites and, in the southeast corner of the face, all the limestone locally passes laterally into soft buff dolostone. These rocks were probably formed on the low–middle part of the basin-margin slope, in anoxic conditions under perhaps 120–200 m of stratified sea water. The laminites were built up of ?annual couplets of pelagic lime mud (winter) and phytoplankton (summer); the graded beds are probably turbidites, composed of lime mud and lime silt that was originally deposited in oxygenated shallower water on the shelf or higher on the slope and redistributed into the basin by turbid suspension currents.
Locality 3 [NZ 398 651] , northwest end of Marsden Bay, an S.S.S.I. (50 mins, hard hats essential)
Park at the northwest end of Marsden Lea car park
Locality 4 [NZ 407 596] , Roker promenade, Sunderland (40 mins)
Park in any of several east–west residential roads off the coast road and (from
The famous 'Cannon-Ball Rocks' are the second main feature of interest at Roker. They form a rounded mass against the promenade just north of the steps and comprise a tightly-packed assemblage of subspherical calcite concretions with patches of inter-concretion fine-grained buff dolomite. The concretions are up to 0.25 m in diameter and most are concentrically laminated and partly coarsely radially crystalline.
Locality 5 [NZ 357 576] , Castletown river cliff (except at high tide); (40 mins)
Wellingtons can be an advantage in approaching this exposure. Park in Sunderland Enterprise Park [NZ 35785 672] and take the footpath signposted 'Hylton Riverside' to the south-southeast through a narrow wooded valley to the riverside. Here the exposure on your left comprises Yellow Sands (6 m+) resting unconformably on Upper Coal Measures sandstone (2 m+). This is the only good exposure of the unconformity in the Sunderland area; it is an almost plane erosion surface and represents a time gap of at least 40 Ma. The underlying sandstone, except for the uppermost 0.3 m, has been reddened by desert weathering and is the youngest permanently exposed Carboniferous stratum in northeast England. The Yellow Sands is a typical desert dune formation; it is weakly cemented (but with patchy well-cemented nodules) in a parallel-laminated coarse-grained basal unit (c.1 m thick) and strongly trough cross-bedded in the remainder where it is medium- to coarse-grained and almost incohesive. The sand is cut by several minor faults and fissures, some of which harbour downward-tapering brown clay probably squeezed down from the Marl Slate when the faults and fissures were created.
Locality 6 [NZ 391 545] Tunstall Hills S.S.S.I. (40 mins)
Approach by the track from Tunstall Road [NZ 38955 464], parking at
The ridge extending southeastwards from here is the surface expression of the comparatively resistant reef rock; lower land to the east of the ridge corresponding with the basin which here was at least 60 m deep. The reef is more than 300 m wide, but its southwestern margin was removed during the last (i.e. late Devensian) ice age when Glacial Lake Wear overflowed southeastwards and cut the spectacular channel of Tunstall Hope.
Locality 7 [NZ 43 49] , Seaham S.S.S.I. (parts covered at highest tides) (60 mins, hard hats are advisable.)
Park in the car park
The harbour was cut into a headland of Seaham Formation limestones, which are well exposed in several large faces. Most of the limestones were originally fine-grained and thinly bedded, and many contain large numbers of Liebea, Schizodus and Calcinema; they are finely cross-bedded and rippled, and some are graded. Changes to some of the limestones, probably during deep burial, resulted in the creation of thick beds full of spectacular calcite concretions not unlike those at Locality 2 but without the distinctive fine lamination of the latter.
Seaham Formation (8 m +). Slightly dislocated thin- to thick-bedded mainly fine-grained buff and grey limestone with abundant Liebea, Schizodus and Calcinema (a small stick-like ?alga) in some beds.
SR 1–3: Seaham Residue (6–9 m). The insoluble remains of the Fordon Evaporite Formation, here otherwise dissolved. Comprises lower (SR1) and upper (SR3) units of heterogeneous calcareous clay and clayey limestone and a dislocated median unit (2m) of white to buff oolitic limestone.
Roker Dolomite Formation, top of. Cream and buff finely oolitic dolostone, partly fractured and altered to limestone.