Cleal, C.J., Thomas, B.A., Batten, D.J. & Collinson, M.E. 2001. Mesozoic and Tertiary Palaeobotany of Great Britain. Geological Conservation Review Series No. 22, JNCC, Peterborough, ISBN 1 86107 489 1. 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
Hayburn Wyke
Introduction
The Hayburn Wyke plant beds have long been known to yield a diverse and well-preserved fossil flora of Aalenian age. It is a key Yorkshire Jurassic plant fossil locality with unique floral elements, especially of cycads. The marchantialean liverwort Hepaticites haiburnensis is known only from this locality.
Hayburn (or 'Haiburn') Wyke is a small bay near Cloughton
Description
Stratigraphy
The section exposed at Hayburn Wyke includes parts of the Saltwick and Eller Beck Formations
Harris' unpublished notebooks refer to 12 separate plant beds in the vicinity of Hayburn Wyke (see
[GR added 2023] | ||||
Lower Deltaic Series (= Saltwick Formation) | Hayburn Beck Zamites Bed | 54° 21' 32" | 0° 26' 50" | |
Hayburn Beck Bed 1 | 54° 21' 40" | 0° 27' 39" | ||
Hayburn Beck Bed 2 | 54° 21' 35" | 0° 27' 4" | ||
Hayburn Wyke Zamites Bed | 54° 21' 27" | 0° 26' 32" | ||
Hayburn Tindall Point Plant Bed | 54° 21' 25" | 0° 26' 12" | ||
Hayburn Phlebopteris Bed below Iron Scar | 54° 21' 9" | 0° 26' 4" | ||
Sycarham Series, Middle Deltaic Series
(= Sycarham Member of Cloughton Formation) |
Hayburn Wyke 25 ft (c.8m) above Iron Scar | 54° 21' 9" | 0° 26' 4" | |
Hayburn Wyke 5 ft (c. 2.7m) above Iron Scar | 54° 21' 9" | 0° 26' 4" | ||
Hayburn Gorse Bed | 54° 21' 3" | 0° 26' 16" | ||
Hayburn Gorse Bed (B5) | ||||
Hayburn Thomas Bed 2 | 54° 21' 57" | 0° 28' 18" | ||
Hayburn–Top of Eller Beck Bed | 54° 21' 25" | 0° 26' 28" |
Palaeobotany
The complete list of about 60 plant species that have been found at Hayburn Wyke is given in
Van Konijnenburg-van Cittert (1978, 1989) used specimens of Coniopteris hymenophylloides (Figure 333), C. murrayana, C. simplex and Todites princeps from Hayburn Wyke in her studies of in-situ spores of these species. Morgans (1999) has described charcoalified conifer wood from floodplain mudstone and crevasse-splay sandstones at the site as Cedroxylon spp., Cupressinoxylon spp., Taxodioxylon spp. and Xenoxylon phyllocladoides Gothan, 1906.
Interpretation
There are several horizons at Hayburn Wyke that yield different assemblages. The Zamites Bed is the richest and most important although it shows intense localization, both vertically and horizontally. Ferns are frequently common with Clathropteris obovata, Coniopteris bella, C. hymenophylloides, C. murrayana, C. simplex, Matonidium goeppertii and Phlebopteris woodwardii. The pteridosperm Pachypteris lanceolata is also common in places. At one point the only gymnosperms found by Harris (1969) were great numbers of Zamites gigas leaves
In contrast, the Equisetum bed, which is just above the Iron Scar
Conclusion
The Hayburn Wyke plant beds contain an important and rich flora including several species that were first described from here and the only known occurrence of the liverwort Hepaticites haiburnensis. A reassessment of the species content of the various horizons should reveal valuable ecological information.