Ellis, N.V. (ed.), Bowen, D.Q., Campbell, S., Knill, J.L., McKirdy, A.P., Prosser, C.D.,Vincent, M.A. & Wilson, R.C.L. 1996. An Introduction to the Geological Conservation Review. GCR Series No. 1, Joint Nature Conservation Committee, 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
<gg-figure name=""></gg-figure>Chapter 3 An introduction to the geological history of Britain
The importance of sites
In the previous chapter, a variety of sites were introduced to illustrate the need for Earth heritage conservation. Evidence from many sites, where rocks and landforms were formed at different times and places, has allowed a historical sequence of geological events and previous geographies to be built up. These rocks and landforms at Earth heritage sites are still important for revealing new evidence, and for refining theories concerning their method and date of formation. To illustrate the importance of sites to the Earth sciences, three are described which show how information about Earth history can be inferred from the evidence they contain.
Salisbury Crags and Arthur's Seat, Edinburgh
Research began at this site over two centuries ago and the Crags played a most significant role in the early establishment of geological science. In Theory of the Earth (1795) James Hutton advocated the Vulcanist theory that the crystalline rocks of Salisbury Crags were formed by the intrusion and cooling of hot molten rock (magma) and not, as was the contemporary Neptunist view, as a precipitate from a primordial sea. Study and interpretation of the site was therefore vital in deciding the controversy between Vulcanists and Neptunists.
The igneous rock is sandwiched within sedimentary rocks which were baked as the molten rock intruded
The principle that processes observed today can be used to interpret those which occurred in the past is an important tool in Earth science. By making comparisons with contemporary active volcanoes and volcanic rocks, it is possible to find evidence in the Edinburgh area of former lava lakes, volcanic vents (now preserved as lava blocks in volcanic ash), numerous lava flows, volcanic ash layers and a sequence of lake sediments which accumulated within and adjacent to the volcanic vents. Arthur's Seat consists of two pipes of an ancient volcano which were active 350 million years ago. The site also shows the effects of earth movement, which has caused the eastward tilt of the rocks. The relationship between the original volcano and Arthur's Seat is shown in
The site is now one of the most heavily used educational areas in Britain, and is of international significance as one of the most intensively investigated ancient volcanoes in the world.
Barton Cliffs, Hampshire
These cliffs
The abundant fossils at Barton Cliffs — molluscs, reptiles, mammals, birds and plants — have also enabled correlations to be made with rocks of similar age in other parts of the world. Thus the exposures at Barton are an international reference section or 'stratotype', and sediments all over the world of an equivalent age are called Bartonian, which corresponds to a span of time between 41 and 35 million years ago.
Islay and Jura, the Inner Hebrides
Raised cliff-lines, shore-platforms and shingle beach ridges, up to 30 metres above present sea level, occur along the coastlines of Islay and Jura in the Inner Hebrides
During an ice age, large volumes of ocean water become locked up in ice sheets and glaciers and, in consequence, the global sea level falls. In those areas actually covered by ice, such as Scotland, the weight of ice depresses the Earth's crust below the position of the modern sea level. At the end of an ice age, water is returned to the oceans by melting ice sheets and the global sea level rises. In the crust is also recovering. These processes occurred at variable rates. But when the rate of sea-level rise and the rate of crustal recovery were approximately the same, major shoreline features were fashioned. This happened at ocean levels below that of modern sea level. After the ice age, when the Earth's major ice sheets had melted, when sea level had been restored to its modern position and the Earth's crust had recovered to its pre-glacial position, the late- glacial shorelines were uplifted above modern sea level.
The late-glacial coastal features of Islay and Jura were formed when global sea level was below the present, and when the Earth's crust was locally depressed by the weight of the Scottish ice sheet. Both the global sea level and the Earth's crust of the Inner Hebrides have now recovered to their pre- glacial position. The coastal features that were formed between approximately 15,000 and 12,000 years ago, below the modern sea level, have been uplifted and now lie up to 30 metres above sea level.
The geology of Britain
Introduction
Geological maps provide the framework in time and space which permits stories from individual sites to be synthesised to produce the geological history of Britain.
The origin of rocks
The key to
Sedimentary rocks
Weathering and erosion of pre-existing subsequently transported by rivers and marine currents to produce sediments such as sands and muds. After burial beneath further layers of sediment, these deposits become consolidated to produce sedimentary rocks such as sandstones, mudstones and shales. In addition to being formed from fragments of pre-existing rock, sedimentary rocks such as limestones are produced by accumulation of the calcareous skeletons of organisms, for example corals or bivalve shells (like those commonly seen on British beaches). For example, the accumulation of the microscopic calcareous skeletal elements of plankton produces a very fine-grained limestone known as chalk.
Igneous rocks
Rocks that have crystallised from molten material (magma) consist of individual interlocking angular mineral grains, unlike rocks at the Earth's surface yields a vast amount of rock debris that is sedimentary rocks, in which the mineral grains or rock fragments show some degree of rounding.
Igneous rocks may have cooled at the Earth's surface, in which case they are called extrusive (or volcanic, as in the key to
Metamorphic rocks
Rocks which have been altered from their original state by heat and/or pressure are known as metamorphic rocks. Such alteration occurs from several to tens of kilometres beneath the Earth's surface. Slates are grained metamorphic rocks formed from mudstones, and are included under sedimentary rocks in the key to
Geological time
The key to the geological map shown in
Eons, eras and periods are shown systematically in
As stated in Chapter 1, Britain was the cradle of the science of geology, resulting in many of the divisions of geological time shown in
Fossils
Palaeontology is the study of fossils. Fossils are the remains or 'traces' of plants or animals which have been buried by natural processes and then permanently preserved. These include skeletal materials (e.g. bones and shells), tracks, trails and borings made by living organisms, as well as their excrement. They also include the impressions (moulds or casts) of organisms on rock surfaces, and even actual biological material. For fossilisation to occur, the death of a plant or animal must normally be followed by its rapid burial, otherwise the remains will be physically broken up or destroyed by scavengers or by chemical and biological decay. |
Once the organic trace has been buried it may be preserved as unaltered material, such as original skeletal material, mammoths frozen in permafrost or insects in amber. Alternatively it may be petrified. In this case, minerals have either replaced the previous cells or tissue, or filled in pores in the original material. Sometimes the sediment around a fossil may survive but the fossil itself is dissolved away, leaving a mould which may later become infilled with another mineral. This creates a cast of the original fossil. |
Fossils are named in the same way as living plants and animals, and are important as a means of determining the relative ages of rocks. They can be used to reconstruct a detailed history of life on Earth and explain the rate and pattern of evolution and the nature of ancient environments and ecosystems. The importance of fossils is illustrated in the diagram. |
Some geological patterns
Even a fairly superficial examination of the geological map of Britain shown in
The regions exhibiting more complex patterns visible in the western and northern areas of
Mountain building episodes
Mountain building results in the deformation of previously deposited sediments and volcanic rocks to produce complex fold structures. This deformation also results in the thickening of the Earth's crust, so that some rocks are buried deep beneath the Earth's surface, where extremely high temperatures and pressures produce metamorphic rocks. The thickening of the crust results in uplift, as the rocks that comprise mountain belts are less dense than those beneath, and so they 'float' on deeper layers, much like an iceberg floats in water. As with icebergs, the deeper the submerged part, the higher the relief at the surface.
Mountain building and plate tectonics
As already stated, mountain building is linked to the closing of former oceans. Today (and in the geological past) oceans are floored by crustal material that has a greater density than continental crust. As shown in
It is known from a variety of lines of evidence (including direct measurement from satellites) that horizontal movements occur in the Earth's crust. In fact, different parts of the crust move in different directions. The crust consists of a series of slabs or tectonic plates: where they collide or move apart, there are zones of earthquakes and volcanic activity, but there is little activity away from the boundaries between the plates.
To the west of South America, the Pacific oceanic crust is moving eastwards, plunging beneath the continental crust, where it enters a hotter region and begins to melt. The resultant magma rises upwards, melting some of the continental crust on its way to produce granites. Some of the magmas, which are very viscous, do reach the surface and cause explosive volcanic activity. This plate collision zone is also characterised by a zone of earthquakes beneath South America, as well as an ocean trench and the Andean mountain belt.
Constructive plate boundaries: where basaltic magma rises from the mantle to form ocean ridges such as that running down the middle of the Atlantic. They are also characterised by shallow earthquakes (down to 5 km depth).
- Destructive plate boundaries: where oceanic crust plunges beneath continental crust. This process is called subduction: it is associated with deep ocean trenches and an inclined zone of earthquakes down to depths of several hundred kilometres. Subduction results in the melting of crustal material which rises to form plutons (see
(Figure 12) ) within the overlying continental crust, and if they reach the surface they cause explosive volcanic activity. Destructive plate boundaries also occur where two slabs of continental crust collide (such as in the Himalayan region today). Most of the Pacific Ocean is ringed by destructive plate margins; on its western side many such margins are marked by ocean trenches and associated volcanic islands arranged in an arc-like pattern, such as the Japanese islands. - Conservative plate boundaries: where plates slide past each other, causing shallow earthquakes (the best known example is the San Andreas Fault in California).
What causes the movement of crustal plates? Basically, plate movement is the mechanism by which the Earth loses its internal heat generated by the breakdown of radioactive elements present in the crust and mantle. The internal heat drives a series of convection currents in the mantle which in turn dr ive plate movement
Thus plate tectonics is the driving force behind mountain building. The formation of new oceans and their subsequent 'closure' produce a variety of rock types and structures that enable past plate tectonic processes to be interpreted from the rock record. At destructive plate margins, sedimentary rocks are folded, faulted and deeply buried, leading to metamorphism. Igneous processes along such margins result in the formation of huge masses of intrusive igneous rocks above which explosive volcanoes occur. Most of the granite shown on the geological map in
A geological history of Britain
The Precambrian rocks of Britain
Over 85% of Earth history is represented by the Precambrian Era, the time between consolidation of the Earth's crust and the beginning of the Cambrian Period, about 570 million years ago. Less is known about these rocks than those formed during the last 570 million years of the geological history of Britain, because most of the early rocks have been eroded, deformed, metamorphosed or buried beneath younger rocks. No trace has yet been found anywhere on Earth of rocks which date from the first 600 million years of the Earth's history, but rocks and minerals approximately 4000 million years old have now been a found in most of the major continents. These rocks provide evidence of the nature of the early Earth.
During the Precambrian there was more rapid movement of the plates of the crust because of higher levels of heat production (caused by radioactive decay) and because the crust was still forming and was thinner. Consequently, many Precambrian rocks have undergone at least one episode of mountain building (orogeny), and some may have undergone several.
The oldest Precambrian rocks to be found in Britain are the Lewisian gneisses (
Rocks which formed at the end of the Precambrian show evidence of animal life, and jellyfish-like fossils can be found in the Precambrian rocks of central England (see
Since the Precambrian, continuing major continental movements first created and then dispersed a single giant supercontinent, known as Pangaea
The Cambrian, Ordovician and Silurian rocks of Britain
Rocks of the Cambrian Period, found in Scotland, originally formed part of a North American continent, and were separated from the Cambrian rocks of England and Wales by a wide ocean, the Iapetus (see
Later, in the Silurian Period, the development of coral reefs indicates a shallowing of the ocean. The Silurian fossils show none of the geographic differences characteristic of the Cambrian and Ordovician periods, because by this time species could move freely between either side of the shrinking Iapetus Ocean. At the end of the Silurian, the climax of the Caledonian period of mountain building occurred as 'Scotland' and 'England' finally collided.
The Devonian and Carboniferous rocks of Britain
The Caledonian mountains were rapidly eroded and great thicknesses of sediment, now known as the Old Red Sandstone, accumulated over much of northern 'Britain' and south 'Wales' during the Devonian Period. In 'Devon' and 'Cornwall' the land was bordered by tropical seas which persisted through the Devonian and Carboniferous periods (see
The Devonian continent supported freshwater lakes with many fish species. Sediments which formed near hot mineral-rich springs at lake edges, about 370 million years ago, have been found at Rhynie in Scotland (see
During the early part of the Carboniferous Period the remnants of the Caledonian mountains were flooded by a warm tropical sea in which thick layers of limestone were deposited. In the late Carboniferous huge deltas invaded this sea. On the surface of the deltas dense forests of giant horsetails, tree-ferns, giant clubmosses flourished. The remains of these trees were sometimes buried, to be transformed later into coal
Towards the end of the Carboniferous Period, a northward-moving plate collided with the southern margin of the Old Red Sandstone Continent in south- west 'England'. This was the final event in the construction of the supercontinent Pangaea (see
The Permian and Triassic rocks of Britain
Desert conditions prevailed over much of Pangaea during these periods. Vast areas of sand dunes were preserved as the 'New Red Sandstone'
The drier conditions led to evolutionary changes in the animals and plants. Forests of conifers and cycads (the sago palm is a modern cycad) began to replace the earlier plant-forms, and about 300 million years ago the reptiles became more prolific.
The Jurassic and Cretaceous rocks of Britain
At the beginning of the Jurassic Period much of 'Britain' was flooded by a warm sea teeming with life. In Britain, shallow- marine Jurassic rocks occur in a belt from Dorset to Yorkshire, in South Wales and in scattered patches in the islands of north-west Scotland and in northern Scotland (olive-green in
Thick deposits of calcareous ooze, formed from the remains of plankton, accumulated in the late Cretaceous seas over much of 'Britain'. These became the Chalk which is now only found in eastern and southern Britain
During the Triassic and Jurassic periods, the supercontinent of Pangaea began to be slowly pulled apart (see
The Tertiary rocks of Britain
The fossil record indicates that many plants and animals became extinct at the Cretaceous–Tertiary boundary about 65 million years ago. This mass extinction was perhaps the result of a global catastrophic event, such as a meteorite impact or major volcanic eruption. On land the dinosaurs and pterosaurs became extinct, but in the Tertiary Period the mammals diversified and flowering plants began to predominate at the expense of the earlier plant types. In the sea, gastropods and bivalve molluscs proliferated, but the ammonites, belemnites and many types of marine reptile became extinct.
As the Atlantic Ocean opened between 'Greenland' and 'Scotland', a chain of volcanoes erupted, flooding the landscape with extensive lava flows. Their eroded remnants can now be recognised on Skye
'Britain' continued to move northwards from the tropics into the cooler mid-latitudes (see
Quaternary sediments and landforms of Britain
The long geological history of Britain has influenced its landscape, but much of its present shape was fashioned during the Quaternary Period ('Great Ice Age'), during the last two million years or so. The Quaternary consisted of several ice ages separated by temperate interglacial climates. During the ice ages, glaciers grew in the mountains and occasionally large ice sheets advanced into lowland 'Britain'. On one occasion, ice extended as far south as 'London'
Early in the Quaternary Period, these ice ages occurred about every 41,000 years, when the uplands of England, Scotland and Wales were probably entirely ice-capped on each occasion, although the evidence has been destroyed by later glaciations. Over the last 900,000 years, however, the rhythm of the major ice ages changed and they have occurred about every 100,000 years. It was during this time that major glaciations greatly modified the landscapes of Britain
Areas beyond the ice-sheet margins were affected by frost, ice and wind, in a cold and dry climate, like the Arctic of today. Such conditions are called 'periglacial'. Slopes were attacked by freezing and thawing processes to create rock debris and produce a widespread layer of periglacial deposits. Rivers were unable to transport all of this material, so deposition occurred on wide floodplains with braided channels. Extensive periglacial gravel deposits are widespread in southern England.
During the ice ages, global sea levels were relatively low because ocean water was locked up in the ice sheets. For example, at the peak of the last ice age, some 22,000 years ago, the sea level was approximately 120 metres below that of today. Thus, 'England' was joined to 'Europe' at that time.
In the glaciated areas of Britain, the weight of the ice depressed the Earth's crust. When the ice retreated, and before the crust 'rebounded' to its former position, the sea fashioned shorelines at levels relatively lower than at the present. When the crust finally returned to its pre-glacial level, such shorelines were uplifted above present-day sea level to form 'rebound' raised beaches. There are many such beaches in Scotland (see
Ice-age conditions were separated by periods of temperate interglacial climate, when Britain was sometimes at least as warm as today, and mixed oak temperate forests became established. During the interglacials there was less ice on the Earth's surface and beaches formed at times of relatively high sea level. These are now found in southern Britain. Many have been raised by gradual long- term uplift.
The flora and fauna of Britain responded to the climatic changes during the Quaternary Period. Variations in the type and distribution of plants and animals have been reconstructed from fossil remains, including pollen grains and fossil bones preserved in peat bogs, as well as lake and cave sediments. This is evident at sites such as West Runton, Norfolk, for example
Fossils of mammals such as hippopotamus, rhinoceros, elephant, cave hyena, woolly mammoth and early humans have been found in Britain. In the raised beach deposits at Boxgrove, West Sussex, hominid remains (a tibia bone and a tooth) and stone tools have been estimated at between 400,000 and half a million years old. At Swanscombe, in Kent, a skull intermediate in form between Homo erectus and Neanderthal Man has been found in sediments about 400,000 years old. Stone tools of an even older age have also been found at High Lodge, Suffolk, and Torquay, Devon.
Britain after the last ice age
Following the disappearance of the last upland glaciers from Britain 11,500 years ago, a succession of vegetation communities recolonised the land and geomorphological processes continued to modify the landscape. On the coast, erosion and deposition caused by variations in the relative level of land and sea as well as the variability of coastal processes, led to changes in the shape of coastlines. Beaches, dune systems and shingle structures also developed where there was a ready supply of sediment. Inland, slopes left after the ice had melted were affected by mass-movement processes, from soil- creep to landslides, while rivers cut channels through the glacial, and other, sediments on valley floors.
The water released to the oceans from the melting of ice sheets in Eurasia and North America flooded any connection between Ireland and Britain. Britain also became separated from continental Europe. At that point, further natural colonisation of plants and animals from the continent was inhibited.
Changes in vegetation over the last 11,500 years are shown by pollen and other plant remains preserved in bogs and lake deposits. The sequence of sediments at such sites can also be used to infer changing environmental conditions and to provide baseline information against which past and present human impacts on the environment may be assessed.
Present-day Britain
Contemporary geomorphological processes cause changes that are, perhaps, not as dramatic as they were during the ice ages.
But coastal and river processes can cause major changes over only a few centuries, or even catastrophically, as in the case of the Exmoor floods and North Sea storm-surge flooding, both in 1953. Other examples of geomorphological activity today include weathering and mass- movement processes.
British landscapes have been further diversified by human activity, which has modified slopes and rivers, and provided a cultural overlay of a series of landscapes altered over many historical periods. Historically, perhaps the greatest changes have been those of marsh and heath reclamation, woodland clearance and the development of agricultural field systems.
The importance of Britain in the development of geology
The record of Earth history has been assembled by the careful accumulation and consideration of evidence from the Earth's rocks. British natural historians, scientists and scholars played a pioneering role in developing the sciences of geology and geomorphology. The wealth of evidence in Britain's landscape enabled them to develop their ideas and theories. A brief account of the early development of geological science is given here to show how important Britain's Earth heritage was in developing the principles of geology.
During the latter part of the eighteenth and the early part of the nineteenth centuries, major advances in geology occurred. In 1795, James Hutton published Theory of the Earth, which is regarded as the first concerted attempt to explain geological phenomena in scientific rather than biblical terms. Hutton defined the principle of uniformitarianism, which is the proposal that processes observed today can be used to interpret the past. He recognised the operation of processes over long periods of geological time and cycles in Earth history
In 1807 the Geological Society of London was founded, the first geological society in the world. It became a centre for geologists to meet to discuss new discoveries and theories. Not long afterwards, in 1815, William Smith, a land surveyor and civil engineer, published a geological map of England and Wales, based on principles developed from his early observations around Bath, including canal excavations. There he established a system of correlating rock strata by comparing their fossil contents. This became the basis of modern stratigraphy. He was described by the President of the Geological Society, at an award ceremony in 1831, as 'the father of English geology'.
In 1835 the Geological Survey of Great Britain was established, the first in the world, to carry out detailed geological mapping of the whole country. Its first Director, Sir Henry de la Beche, produced the first survey memoir, describing the metalliferous ore fields of south-west England. In 1837 the Survey was given accommodation in London, which included a Museum of Practical Geology. In 1934 the museum relocated to South Kensington, where it now forms the Earth Galleries of the Natural History Museum.
In the 1830s, Sir Roderick Impey Murchison began a study of the rocks of south and central Wales. He compared rocks at different localities by means of the fossils they contained, including different species of trilobite. In 1858 he published Siluria, naming this sequence of rocks after an ancient Celtic tribe, the Silures. Meanwhile, Adam Sedgwick was investigating the rocks of the Lake District and North Wales. These are older than the rocks that were studied by Murchison and contain some of the oldest fossils in Britain. He named these rocks the 'Cambrian', based on the Latinised Welsh name for Wales Cymru. As a consequence of their further studies in south-west England together they named the Devonian System
Although some Cambrian and Silurian rocks as originally defined by Murchison and Sedgwick were quite distinct, others contained similar assemblages of fossils. A controversy erupted between them which was not resolved until after their deaths. Subsequently, Charles Lapworth, a clergyman, spent his spare time studying the rocks around Galashiels in southern Scotland. He looked particularly at graptolite fossils
In the 1820s Mary Anning collected and sold Jurassic fossils in Lyme Regis, Dorset
In 1822, Mary Ann Mantell discovered fossil teeth in the Cretaceous Wealden rocks while walking in Ashdown Forest, Sussex. These were later identified as those of a large herbivorous reptile, Iguanodon. In 1824, a fossil thigh bone came into the hands of Professor William Buckland, who named the animal Megalosaurus, later discovered to be a large carnivore. Further finds included fossils of the armoured Hylaeosaurus, described by Charles Mantell (Mary Ann's husband) in 1832, and a large sauropod dinosaur, Cetiosaurus, from the Oxford Clay near Peterborough. In 1841, at a meeting of the British Association for the Advancement of Science, Dr Richard Owen first suggested that Iguanodon, Megalosaurus (see
Significant advances in the understanding of ice ages and landscape changes were also made in Britain during the nineteenth century. In the early 1840s the evidence of glacial landforms in Scotland made a significant impression on the Swiss geologist Louis Agassiz, a leading figure in advancing 'the Glacial Theory'. He helped develop thinking on the possibility of glaciation in areas where there were no modern glaciers. In 1842 Charles Darwin and William Buckland also confirmed the ideas of Agassiz in Wales. Robert Jamieson and Charles Maclaren played an important part in the wider dissemination of the ideas Agassiz advocated, together with those of other early glacialists.
Maclaren is also credited with first recognising the sea-level changes associated with glacio- eustasy (changes in global sea level as water, once locked up in ice sheets, was released on subsequent melting). Thomas Jamieson was the first to recognise complementary glacio-isostatic changes in sea level ('rebound' of continental crust when the weight of ice which depressed it is removed upon melting of the ice). His conclusion was based on detailed studies of raised beach deposits in the Forth Valley.
Archibald Geikie, Director General of the Geological Survey, Andrew Ramsay and James Croll identified multiple phases of glaciation in the sedimentary record. Croll also recognised that the changes in climate were controlled by variations in the Earth's orbit around the Sun and that ocean currents played a major part in heat transfer from the tropics to higher latitudes. Geikie contributed significantly to the understanding and interpretation of the links between geology and geomorphology. His younger brother, James, published The Great Ice Age in 1874, a highly influential book with an international perspective on the Ice Age.
During the nineteenth and twentieth centuries the Geological Society of London, the British Geological Survey and the universities, amongst others, advanced the study of geology and geomorphology in Great Britain. Knowledge of the geological column has been refined by international collaboration, which has also facilitated the correlation of geological events in Britain with those elsewhere. At the same time, our understanding of the geological and geomorphological processes which have been at work throughout the period of geological history continues to be deepened, and methods for locating economic resources below ground also continue to be developed and refined.