Rushton, A.W.A., Owen, A.W., Owens, R.M. & Prigmore, J.K. 2000. British Cambrian to Ordovician Stratigraphy. Geological Conservation Review Series No. 18, JNCC, Peterborough, ISBN 1 86107 4727. 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
Balcreuchan Port–Bennane Head
Introduction
The sea-cliffs between Balcreuchan Port and Bennane Head expose local sedimentary units within the dominantly volcanic Balcreuchan Group that contain early and mid-Arenig graptolites, including the only British examples of the important basal Arenig zonal fossil Tetragraptus approximatus. These graptolite faunas, which are best correlated with the Australasian succession
The Ballantrae Complex plays an important role in assessing the geological evolution of southern Scotland. Church and Gayer (1973) regarded it as an ophiolite emplaced tectonically by northward obduction at the margin of the Midland Valley Terrane (Bevins et al., 1992, p. 20). Stone and Smellie (1988) reviewed the whole complex and concluded that although it is an amalgam of disparate elements, most can be related to an oceanic crustal setting. Smellie and Stone (1992) envisaged the assembly of the complex through a process of southward subduction followed by northward obduction, whereas northward subduction prior to obduction was favoured by Bluck (1992) and Armstrong et al. (1999).
Broadly speaking, the Ballantrae Complex is composed of ultramafic rocks (serpentine and gabbro) and the Balcreuchan Group, which is made up of volcanic rocks (especially basaltic pillow lavas) and sedimentary rocks (sandstone, mudstone and chert). The Balcreuchan Group is exposed in three belts: a northern or Pinbain outcrop, which has yielded early Arenig graptolites in its lowest part (Rushton et al., 1986); a southern outcrop, so far unfossiliferous, extending along the Stinchar Valley; and the central outcrop, or Bennane Head sector, described by Stone and Smellie (1988, p. 51) and summarized below. The Bennane Head sector was formerly considered to be a conformable succession of great (kilometre-scale) thickness, but Stone and Rushton (1983) demonstrated repetitions in the stratigraphy, suggesting a thinner sequence that has been imbricated by thrusting. Guides to the section are given by Bluck (1992) and Stone (1996), who refer to more detailed accounts of particular localities.
Description
The coastal exposures between Balcreuchan Port and Bennane Head show a varied succession of steeply dipping rocks that strike NNW and young consistently westwards
To the west of unit 4, a major fault introduces clastic sedimentary strata overlain conformably by (5) reddened feldsparphyric pillow-basalts identical to those of Unit 2, and at the top of these
About 1 km to the south, just south of Bennane Head, aphyric lavas overlie thick basalt breccia and are succeeded by a unit (7) of sandstone, breccia and chert
Interpretation
Although the rock succession faces uniformly westwards, giving the appearance of a thick, conformable sequence, the distribution of faunas is not consistent with a through succession because it shows alternations of early and mid-Arenig faunas. This suggests that the Balcreuchan Group succession is repeated by a series of thrusts: feldsparphyric basalts, overlying or containing early Arenig graptolites, are succeeded by aphyric basalts that contain or are overlain by mid-Arenig graptolite faunas. Thus, in the sequence outlined above, units 5 and 6 are considered to be a tectonic repetition of units 2 and 3. A further faulted repetition of the feldsparphyric lava is seen north of Port Vad, but there is no faunal evidence there.
According to this interpretation, the T. approximatus from unit 5 should be marginally younger than the species from unit 1; given the stratigraphical range of T. approximatus this is quite possible, though the implication in Stone and Rushton (1983, p. 300, 301) is that the fossils of unit 5 might be slightly the older. Similarly the present interpretation would demand that the fauna from unit 7 be slightly younger than that from unit 4, and again the biostratigraphical evidence is not precise enough either to contradict or to affirm the hypothesis (Stone and Smellie, 1988, p. 53, table 5). However, a part of the faunal succession, corresponding to the upper parts of the Bendigonian Stage, is unrepresented in the Bennane Head sector, and it may be that there is a non-sequence in the stratigraphy. The obvious level for such a non-sequence is the change from feldsparphyric basalts (units 2 and 5) to aphyric basalts (units 3 and 6), which would accord with Lewis' idea (in Stone and Rushton, 1983, p. 300) that the reddened condition of the feldsparphyric basalts was caused by long exposure on the sea floor.
Conclusions
The coast between Balcreuchan Port and Bennane Head exposes part of the Ballantrae Complex, a fragment of ancient sea floor that has been driven by plate-tectonic processes onto a continental margin now underlying the Midland Valley of Scotland. Graptolites found at some of the coastal exposures include the only British examples of the important zonal species Tetragraptus approximatus and are especially significant in showing that the apparently great thickness of the rock succession is at least partly the result of duplication by thrust faults.