Huddart, D. & Glasser, N.F. 2007. Quaternary of Northern England. Geological Conservation Review Series No. 25, JNCC, Peterborough, ISBN 1 86107 490 5. 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
Mere Sands Wood
R.C. Chiverrell
Introduction
Mere Sands Wood provides the best exposures of an extensive (200 km2) periglacial aeolian deposit (coversand) in south-west Lancashire
Description
Mere Sands Wood SSSI is 10 km east of Southport in south-west Lancashire, and is located within the boundaries of the Mere Sands Wood Nature Reserve. Mere Sands Wood is near the edge of a formerly extensive (6 km by 3 km) low-lying (2.7–3.4 m OD) freshwater lake, Martin Mere, drained at the end of the 17th century. Sand was extracted at Mere Sands Wood until 1982, when the Lancashire Wildlife Trust acquired the site and flooded the pits to create the Nature Reserve. Sections in the sand-pits reveal Shirdley Hill Sands underlying a sequence of Holocene organic sediments (Tooley and Kear, 1977). The stratigraphy is listed in
Interpretation
Gresswell (1957) identified a mid-Holocene shoreline (6000–5000 years BP) near the Lancashire coast, which was referred to as the 'Hillhouse Coastline'. The Shirdley Hill Formation (unit 1,
Unit | Depth (cm) | Lithology |
9 | 0–90 | Mere Sands (Wilson, 1985) |
8 | 90–98 | Sandy substantia humosa |
7 | 98–105 | Fine detrital mud |
6 | 105–139 | Turfa herbaceae |
5 | 139–140 | Turfa menyanthis |
4 | 140–141 | Fine detrital mud |
3 | 141–157 | Fine–sandy detrital mud and Turfa herbaceae |
2 | 157–160 | Fine detrital mud and Turfa herbaceae |
1 | 160– Locally up to 5 metres thick | Shirdley Hill Formation: loose fine to medium moderately to moderately well sorted sands displaying weak cross-bedding and cryoturbation structures |
Wilson et al. (1981) used particle-size analysis, scanning electron microscopy of quartz grains and structures in the sediments at Mere Sands Wood to confirm an aeolian origin for the Shirdley Hill Formation. Mineralogical analyses of unweathered Shirdley Hill Formation and several different potential source materials demonstrate that the coversands closely resemble glaciofluvial sediment. Wilson et al. (1981) suggested that the Shirdley Hill Formation consists of wind-blown sands derived from outwash sediments left by the Devensian ice sheet. Bateman (1995) correlates the Shirdley Hill Formation with the European coversand chronology presented by Koster (1988) using three thermolu-minescence (TL) dates for the sequence at Mere Sands Wood
The organic sediments at Mere Sands Wood reflect the accumulation of plant-rich detritus and peat in an aquatic to peatland environment on the edge of Martin Mere (Tooley, 1985). Pollen diagrams
The organic sediments are covered by a further sequence of sands, the Mere Sands (Wilson, 1985), and three explanations exist for the sand's origin and mode of deposition.
- Lacustrine sands derived from glaciofluvial material and the Shirdley Hill Formation (Crompton, 1966).
- Wind-blown reworked Shirdley Hill Formation (Tooley and Kear, 1977).
- Wilson et al. (1981) found that the Mere Sands differed substantially from the Shirdley Hill Formation and had a greater affinity with modern beach and dune material on the Lancashire coast.
The pollen spectra in units 4–5 are out of sequence, containing abundant Quercus, Ulmus and Alnus before the early Holocene expansion of these species. Tooley (1985) invokes a scenario with units 3–5 (2.5–2.6 m OD) deposited when unit 6 was floated up as Martin Mere expanded as a freshwater lake. There is evidence for a similar event affecting altitudes of 3.1–3.2 m OD at Tarlscough Moss, a peat sequence on the edge of Martin Mere (McAllister, 2001). The timing for this floating is uncertain, although it has been correlated with higher lake levels in Martin Mere forced by higher local water tables during marine incursions dated to 6890 ± 55 and 6790 ± 95 years BP at Downholland Moss (Tooley, 1974, 1978a, 1985; Huddart, 1992). Organic sedimentation at Mere Sands Wood ceases around 7000 years ago.
Conclusions
Mere Sands Wood is an important reference site for studies of the Shirdley Hill Formation, and for elucidating the geomorphology and environmental history during the Late Devensian and the Holocene in south-west Lancashire. Mere Sands Wood is a former pit from which sand was extracted for glass making up until 1982, when the site was flooded to form the present nature reserve. Currently there is little exposure of the stratigraphy owing to the flooding and natural degradation of the faces. Trenching of drainage ditches reveals the organic sequence and the uppermost metre of the Shirdley Hill Formation. Nevertheless Mere Sands Wood offers some of the best exposures of the Shirdley Hill Formation. The sands were reworked by aeolian processes from glaciofluvial sediments under a periglacial climatic regime during the Late Devensian. This Late Devensian periglacial coversand is luminescence dated to 13240–10220 years BP and is analogous to the Younger Coversand II in the European chronology (Koster, 1988; Bateman, 1995). The palaeoecology of the organic sediments provides useful information about the early Holocene in southwest Lancashire.