Cossey, P.J., Adams, A.E., Purnell, M.A., Whiteley, M.J., Whyte, M.A. & Wright, V.P. 2004 British Lower Carboniferous Stratigraphy. Geological Conservation Review Series, No. 29, JNCC, Peterborough. 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
Clints and Steelbarrow Quarries, Cumbria
Introduction
The large disused quarry complex at Clints
Description
The account that follows derives principally from the work of Thurlow (1996) who logged and described the Asbian part of the succession (White Limestone) and Eastwood et al. (1931) who described the higher Brigantian part of the succession. The section is dissected by a number of NNW–SSE-trending normal faults.
The White Limestone (c. 20 m) can be seen resting on the micaceous siltstones of the Fourth Shale in the entrance cutting to Clints Quarry. It is more clearly seen in the north face of the quarry where it consists of thickly bedded limestones interbedded with palaeosol clays, resting on the top karstified surface of the Fifth Limestone. One palaeosol clay in the middle of the succession is particularly thick and passes laterally into alternating bands of clay and limestone. The top of the White Limestone is also deeply karstified and contains a sandstone fill.
The Rough Limestone (14 m) is darker coloured and more bituminous than the White Limestone. The Spotted Limestone, so-called because of conspicuous darker spots in a paler 'matrix' (pseudobrecciation), is 6 m thick. The Potholes Limestone (6 m) has at its upper boundary a karstic surface with up to 2 m of relief; which gives it its name
The Saccammina Limestone (6 m) is typically a grey crinoidal limestone characterized by the problematical organism Saccaminopsis scattered throughout its thickness. Close to the top of this limestone is the Erythrospongia Sponge Band, recorded throughout northern England at this level by Hudson (1929) and later traced into the west Cumbria district by Hudson and Edmonds (see Eastwood et al., 1931). Saccaminopsis is also abundant in the overlying mottled shales which fill the potholed surface developed on the limestone. The Junceum Limestone (c. 16 m), named after the coral Siphonodendron junceum which occurs at a number of levels, is rather variable in colour and contains chert nodules and silicified fossils.
Higher beds of the Third Limestone (2 m) and the base of the Orebank Sandstone occur in the south-west corner of Clints Quarry, the former comprising grey crinoidal limestone with corals and brachiopods and the latter comprising pale-coloured quartz-rich sandstone (Johnson, 1992).
Interpretation
The Asbian–Brigantian stage boundary in west Cumbria is taken as the line of division between the top of the White Limestone and the base of the overlying Rough Limestone. Its position at this site is confirmed by the occurrence of the typical Asbian (Dl) brachiopod Davidsonina septosa in the White Limestone, and the typical Brigantian (D2) faunas recorded from the Potholes Limestone (e.g. O. edmondsi, N. edmondsi and C. rugosa)in association with Palastraea regia (Smith et al., 1925; Eastwood et al., 1931; Mitchell et al., 1979). Just above this boundary, and at the base of the Rough Limestone, Smith et al. (1925) recorded the 'Girvanella Band' (= the Girvanella Nodular Bed of this volume), the typical lower Brigantian (D2) marker bed.
As with other Asbian and Brigantian shelf deposits in the British Isles, the succession at this site is strongly cyclic, with episodes of shallow marine carbonate sedimentation punctuated by periods of subaerial exposure and the development of karstic surfaces. Some of these are overlain by clay palaeosols of probable bentonitic origin, but others are overlain by probable fluvial sands (e.g. at the top of the Potholes Limestone). In addition there are shales, such as that at the top of the Saccammina Limestone, which show evidence of a marine origin. The succession is thus intermediate in type between the carbonate shelf successions of south Cumbria and Derbyshire and the Yoredale-type mixed carbonate–clastic successions of the Askrigg and Alston blocks. The closest parallel is probably the Brigantian succession on Anglesey.
Conclusions
This site is the finest and most easily accessed Brigantian section in west Cumbria. It is particularly valuable for demonstrating the cyclicity of the limestones, with the palaeokarstic surfaces well developed and with strong relief. Its value also lies in the presence of marine and fluvial clastics which make the succession intermediate in style between Yoredale-type cycles and pure carbonate cycles.