Gordon, J.E. and Sutherland, D.G. GCR Editor: W.A. Wimbledon. 1993. Quaternary of Scotland. Geological Conservation Review Series No. 6. JNCC, Peterborough, ISBN 0 412 48840 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
Mill Bay
J.E. Gordon
Highlights
The coastal section at Mill Bay is the best locality for demonstrating the shelly till that is characteristic of the eastern part of Orkney. This deposit shows that the ice moved across the sea floor and then onshore in a west-north-west direction. The presence of the shells also provides an important opportunity to date the last main glaciation of the islands.
Introduction
A coastal section at Mill Bay
Description
The section at Mill Bay forms a continuous cliff 610 m high over a distance of nearly 1 km. Peach and Horne (1880) recorded a reddish-brown, gritty clay containing striated stones. In composition the till mostly includes material from the adjacent flagstones and siltstones, but a range of exotic rock types is also present, including igneous and metamorphic lithologies, fossiliferous limestones, chalk, flints and fossil wood. Peach and Horne inferred that the erratics were derived from the Scottish mainland. Numerous fragments of shells, including Arctica islandica (L.), Mytilus and Mya truncata (L.), are also present in the till, and according to Peach and Horne they appear smoothed and striated. Striations on bedrock at Mill Bay are aligned W15°–35°N. Peach and Horne also recorded large blocks of what appeared to be petrified wood in the till. Rae (1976) has provided additional sedimentological and litho-logical details of the till at Mill Bay, and noted the presence of a lens of grey till incorporated in the red till. Rae (1976) also obtained an infinite radiocarbon date of >44,300 BP (T–1152) from shell fragments in the till.
Interpretation
The lithological composition and the erratic and shell content of the Mill Bay till clearly indicate that ice moved onshore from an easterly direction (Peach and Horne, 1880; Rae, 1976) in accordance with the general pattern established for the Orkney Islands. Although, strictly, the radiocarbon date is inconclusive, Rae argued that on the basis of probability it suggests an Early Devensian age for the till. More recently, preliminary results from amino acid epimerization analyses suggest that shells in the till are no younger than the last interglacial, which again lends support to the hypothesis that the maximum age of the till is Early Devensian (see Bowen and Sykes, 1988; Bowen, 1989, 1991).
Mill Bay is an important reference site for the shelly till of Orkney, and it represents the best exposure of its type on the islands. Although shelly till is exposed at several other localities (see Peach and Horne, 1880; Rae, 1976), predominantly in the eastern half of the Orkney Islands
Conclusion
Mill Bay provides the best available exposures in the shelly till (sediments deposited by ice) of Orkney. The presence of the shells of marine molluscs in the till, together with other evidence, indicates the movement of ice across the sea bed and then onshore and towards the west-northwest. Not only is Mill Bay an important reference site for demonstrating this pattern of ice movement, it is also significant for the potential provided by the shells for dating (by geochemical techniques) the last major glaciation of the islands.