Whitbread, K., Ellen, R., Callaghan, E., Gordon, J. E. and Arkley, S. 2015. East Lothian Geodiversity Audit. British Geological Survey Open Report, OR/14/063. 192pp.
ELC_20: Kidlaw Quarry
Site information
Location and summary description:
The site comprises a disused quarry just to the north-west of Kidlaw Farm, 5 km south-west of Gifford. The site exposes basanite, an extrusive basaltic rock composed chiefly of plagioclase, olivine and augite. The Kidlaw Plug belongs to the Scottish Carboniferous to Early Permian Plugs and Vents
Suite.
National Grid reference:
Mid-point:
Site type: Artificial quarry works
Site ownership: Kidlaw Farm
Current use: Disused quarry adjacent to pastoral land.
Field surveyors: Rachael Ellen and Eileen Callaghan
Current geological designations: None
Date visited: 10th June 2014
Other designations: None
Site map
Site description
Background
The quarry was opened between 1855 and 1895, and was worked until at least the 1920’s for road- metal; it was once regarded as one of the better sources of road-metal in East Lothian (Ewing, 1913). The analcime-basanite exposed in the quarry was originally thought to be a sill intruding into the country rock by Clough et. al. in 1910. However, a fresh phase of quarrying in the 1920’s exposed a vertical contact between tuff and basanite leading Simpson (1928) to suggest that it was in fact a volcanic plug.
Today the quarry is accessed via a muddy grass path from a gate at the junction of two roads to the west of Kidlaw Farm
Volcanic rocks
The main quarry face to the north is approximately 5 metres high, composed of a dark grey, fine- grained basanite (a silica poor, alkali rich form of basalt, associated with continental rift magmatism) displaying roughly columnar cooling joints
A fissile, grey – brown tuff and breccia dyke is intruded in the basanite to the west of the quarry. The dyke, and basanite adjacent to the dyke, is well jointed and mineralized. The mineral veins form impressive cross-cutting relationships
N.B. The East Lothian Guide Book mentions that small outcrops of reddish tuff can be seen upon entering the quarry – however, at time of visit, the tuff is no longer visible due to the area being overgrown and covered by tipped waste.
Access and additional information
Access to the site is by a gate at the junction of two minor roads to the west of Kidlaw Farm
N.B. The Kidlaw Erratic (ELC_22) lies 170 m to the east of this site.
Stratigraphy and rock types
Age: Carboniferous
Formation: Kidlaw Plug — Scottish Late Carboniferous to early Permian Plugs and Vent Suite
Rock type: Basanite
Assessment of site: access and safety
Road access and parking Good access and parking for the quarry with the farmer’s permission.
Safety of access Rough uneven ground within the quarry. Caution if cattle are in the field.
Safety of exposure Care should be taken as in all quarries, and an assessment made of each face before approaching. The quarry faces are relatively stable.
Access Access via farm tracks and agricultural land.
Current condition Good exposure of basanite and tuff within the quarry but no exposure of the reddish tuff mentioned in previous documentation due to the ground being overgrown.
Current conflicting activities Farming
Restricting conditions Cattle
Nature of exposure Outcrop and quarry faces.
Assessment of site: culture, heritage & economic value
Historic, archaeological & literary associations Quarried up to at least 1926 for road-metal. Considered one of the best quarries for road-metal in East Lothian.
Aesthetic landscape No association
History of earth sciences Revised interpretation of a sill (1910) to a plug in a vent (1928)
Economic geology Quarried up to at least 1926 for road-metal. Considered one of the best quarries for road-metal in East Lothian.
Assessment of site: geoscientific merit
Rarity | Quality | Literature/collections | Primary interest | |
Lithostratigraphy | ||||
Sedimentology | ||||
Igneous/mineral/metamorphic geology | Regional/National | Good | Simpson (1928), Clough et al., (1910) | X |
Structural geology | ||||
Palaeontology | ||||
Geomorphology |
Site geoscientific value
The site comprises a good exposure of analcime-basanite, forming a plug within a volcanic vent, which allows interpretation of the volcanic character of East Lothian during the Late Carboniferous to Early Permian. Xenoliths of granite and ultra-basic nodules allow interpretation of the strata the basanite was intruded into. Numerous plugs of volcanic material are littered throughout the Midland Valley, but very few are composed of analcime-basanite.
Kidlaw Quarry provides a good example of an analcime-basanite plug with regional to national significance.
Assessment of site: current site usage
Community The quarry is in open countryside, and rarely used by the local community. There is little aesthetic value for the community to visit the site due to rubbish within the quarry, and the use of the field for sheep and cattle grazing.
Education The site presents the best, albeit artificial, exposure of an analcime-basanite plug in East Lothian. This site may be a good locality for educational fieldwork relating to basanite petrology and xenolith studies within Carboniferous intrusions in Scotland.
Assessment of site: fragility and potential use of the site
Fragility Natural overgrowth, geohazard
Potential use School education, higher/further education
Geodiversity summary
The analcime-basanite exposure within Kidlaw Quarry provides a good opportunity to study textures and mineralogy of a Carboniferous volcanic plug. It allows an interpretation of the country rocks the plug intruded into, and an appreciation of the scale and diversity of volcanic activity throughout East Lothian.