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
Outerside
Potential GCR Site
Introduction
Outerside is one of the best localities for the fauna of the hirundo Zone, the uppermost graptolite zone of the Arenig, and is the type locality for several fossil species. It is also one of the few localities in the Lake District at which the base of the Llanvirn Series can be located.
Outerside, a hill 6 km WSW of Keswick ('5' in
Description
The strata at Outerside are laminated mudstones and siltstones but differ from typical Kirk Stile Formation strata in their grey-green colour and the dense, fine, dark spotting, induced by meta-somatism associated with the Crummock Water aureole immediately to the south. Dip and strike are variable, but whereas the dip is generally west to south-west, the beds appear to young to the east. Slumped beds and mass-flow deposits are a sporadic feature of the higher Kirk Stile Formation, and an example of debrite on the south flank of Outerside was figured by Cooper et al. (1995, fig. 8).
Large screes of Kirk Stile Formation have formed on the north-west side of the hill
Exposures on the eastern face of Outerside around
Interpretation
Although Elles (1933) thought that her gibberulus Subzone was present at Outerside, no specimens supporting this notion are known. However, Jackson (1962) agreed with Elles in considering that the main fauna from the scree on the north-west face of Outerside represents the hirundo Zone, and this was followed by Fortey et al. (1990). The hirundo Zone is now correlated approximately with the lower Darriwilian of the Australasian sequence, namely a slightly higher level than that proposed by Fortey et at (1990) and more in keeping with the correlation proposed by Mitchell and Maletz (1995). Apart from the distinctive Aulograptus, the only pendent didymograptids are rare examples of D. protobifidus (type locality), which occurs here much higher than the Chewtonian horizon of Australasian and North American records of this species. Faunas of the hirundo Zone are distributed around the north side of the Skiddaw massif (Jackson, 1962) to Hazelhurst by Souther Fell in the east, where the section passes from Arenig to Llanvirn in graptolitic strata (Fortey et al., 1990, p. 130).
The fauna from the east face of Outerside is taken to be basal Llanvirn (artus Zone) on account of the several examples of D. spinulosus found there, thus supporting Elles' (1933) contention that Llanvirn strata are developed at Outerside. Fortey and Owens (1987, fig. 41a) suggested that the trilobite Gastropolus obtusicaudatus (Hicks) from Outerside might also be from the basal Llanvirn there.
Conclusions
Diverse graptolite faunas from Outerside exemplify a development of the uppermost Arenig hirundo Zone in the upper part of the Kirk Stile Formation and show also the lowest part of the Llanvirn artus Zone. These faunas play an important part in the stratigraphy of the Skiddaw Group and internationally in correlating the Arenig–Llanvirn boundary with the Australasian graptolitic scheme.