North West Highlands Geopark (2016) North West Highlands Geopark Geodiversity Audit and Action Plan 2013–2016 Additional notes: These web pages are sourced from the PDF North West Highlands Geopark Geodiversity Audit and Action Plan 2013–2016
NWHG Ref. 044 — Loch Awe Quarry
Location, grid reference and photograph
The site is located on the east side of the A 837 towards the north-east corner of Loch Awe, north of Ledmore Junction, Grid Ref.
GCR site reference, block, volume and notified feature of SSSI?
GCR Ref. 1023, Cambrian Block, Vol. 18. Confirmed GCR site, not SSSI notified.
Description and geological significance
The potash-rich (Lower Cambrian age) Fucoid Beds are well exposed in the Quarry face and contain well-preserved and age-diagnostic faunas of olenellid trilobites, including the type (and only) locality for Olenellus hamoculus, in exceptional abundance. These dolomitic shales have provided very useful information on the Early Cambrian age and palaeogeography of the Fucoid Beds, enabling correlation with areas in Greenland, Canada and Spitsbergen.
Accessibility
The entrance to the Quarry is located at the eastern edge of the A 837 and there is limited parking provision immediately on the opposite side of the road on an unsurfaced verge. There is a larger, surfaced layby a short distance further north on the west side of the road (
Conservation
In the light of the palaeontological significance of the site, and its proximity to the A 837, there is a moderate to high conservation requirement.
Visibility and “clarity”
Visibilty of the stratified Fucoid Beds is excellent from the entrance to the Quarry.
Interpretation and interpretation potential
The Loch Awe Quarry site currently does not have any interpretation facilities on-site. However, there is considerable potential for new interpretation aimed at both the general public and geological specialists. The immediate area is a popular one for both visitors and fishermen using Loch Awe and the Quarry could be usefully developed as an excellent interpretation locality, with exhibits of the fossiliferous strata being displayed and the implications for palaeogeographical reconstruction explained. However, it should be borne in mind that this is a working quarry. Certainly, the site should be included in a future Geopark guide and it could also be included in any future guided walk of the Canisp area, as it is close to a suitable starting point
Key references
PRIGMORE, J.K. & RUSHTON, A.W.A. 1999. Scotland: Cambrian and Ordovician of the Hebridean Terrane. In Rushton, A. W. A., Owen, A. W., Owens, R. M. & Prigmore, J. K. (eds) British Cambrian to Ordovician Stratigraphy. Geological Conservation Review Series, 18, Chapman & Hall, 295–315.