TVGS WEEKEND FIELD TRIP TO BUDE AREA
This was the first weekend away that Teme Valley Geological Society (TVGS) organised. Once the base location and dates were set, participants made their own accommodation and travel arrangements, gathering on the Friday evening in a local restaurant for introductions and scene setting. At the appointed time and place next morning, we all met up, having made arrangements for refreshments. With the weather and tourist footprint on this area, ice creams were always available and for some became a staple part of the diet. A minimum number of cars was used each day.
All of us would like to express our most sincere thanks to Professor Donny Hutton for his work in making this a very successful visit—the reconnaissance, comprehensive notes, general arrangements and his excellent, empathic way of explaining complex geological structures and processes. We would love to do it again!
Astonishingly we arrived, on time, in non-stop sunshine at a car park in Bude at the appointed hour on Saturday 19th May. All 16 of us (was it?). Breakfasts consumed, lunches packed, sun cream or hats or both, on. Given the quality of Donny’s notes (Intro, S 1, S 2) we looked forward to a quality weekend, and so it proved. In layers.
North Cornwall beaches reveal many striking features, most best seen at low tide–platforms of worn off folds leaning one way then the other, structures such as the whale back at Bude, natural harbours (Boscastle), fabulous surfing beaches (Crackington Haven). The sites we visited were Hartland Quay, Bude, Millook, Widemouth and on Sunday, Boscastle and Crackington Haven.
Sat navving across country on a rural route to our first ‘site’, Hartland Quay, the formations around and across the bay were breathtaking. There were folds of every type in all directions, chevron, anticline, syncline; obvious faulting, all as a result of the infinitely slow, continuously exerted forces of plate tectonics, tops planed down by eons of erosion.
This peninsular region of England is a series of ancient, submarine sedimentary basins, contorted beyond imagination by the clashing of continents during what is known as the Variscan orogeny, when the land lay in equatorial regions.
The mountain building episode had its greatest effect on southern UK some 300Ma. There won’t be many details in this diary entry: two reasons—the ability and knowledge of the writer and the guide, appended, is comprehensive.
As we visited each site, we learned from Donny’s perfectly pitched explanations that there are six basins dividing the length of the SW peninsular. These formed from the South as the moving plates squeezed out of existence the old Rheic ocean. We spent time on only the Culm basin, whereon in the East, folds are more vertically aligned, in the West, more recumbent.
First appearances were deceiving. We began to realise that the distortions we could see, large though they are, were in fact only disturbances on the limbs of very much larger folds. At the other end of the scale we found millimetre sized waves (the more vernacular amongst us termed these, wrinkles).
The layering of sediments making up the whole of this coastline dating from the Carboniferous, was caused by an extended period of turbidity flows (useful reference HERE). Erosion debris from the land, brought into the oceans mainly by rivers, built up into vast, unstable dumps, teetering on the edge of the continental shelf. Rare but repeated earthquakes on a time scale of incomprehensible duration, occasionally caused the mass to start moving down the slope of the abyss. Once in motion, huge, gigantic debris laden waters rushed downwards, fanning out for perhaps hundreds of kilometers across undersea plains, with gradual and sequential settlement into distinct layers. This layering is known as the Bouma sequence, from the scientist who described it. The guide explains the process is more detail. As a result of the graduated deposits over extreme horizontal distances, the whole set is never to be observed in one place—we saw two and maybe three units. You might recall the talk given to us by Dr Esther Sumner on turbidity flows in the canyon off Monterey in California.
A serious consideration for any geologist is ‘which way is up’? It is not clear from first view, whether the layers, as one would expect, ‘young’ from bottom to top in the order of laying down. Fold and over folds leave a puzzle to decipher, but there are clues. For example, on occasion, lighter deposits had somewhat heavier materials scattered over them, causing the lighter to have positive buoyancy and therefore a tendency to move up in the still fluid sequence. The result of this can be small structures known as Flame Structures and once we tuned in, we found many in the rocks around us, sometimes pointing up, sometimes down.
Fold ‘vergence’ (Wiki HERE) was another important term and concept. As folds become recumbent (‘lie over’), one limb becomes longer than the other (see the guide). Smaller folds on each limb change vergence as they are imposed on the longer then the shorter of the main fold limbs. These smaller features can be used to identify the layout of the much bigger folds of which they are part, as they mimic their shape and hence the direction from whence the thrust. In the early 1900s, there was a well known geologist, Pumpelly, who worked in this arena, giving his name to Pumpelly’s Rule.
A few pictures, there are others….. and to keep your interest at a high pitch, the pictures are not in order but most have captions if you move your mouse over them.
Bude beach antiformal pericline
Bude beach. sedimentary structures
Bude Erosion Patterns on Whaleback
Bude beach. sedimentary structures load structure flame structure
Bude beach Crackington fm
Crackington Haven complex folds and faults
Donny at the Whaleback fold Bude beach
Evening Meal at Brendon Arms, Bude
Hartland quay chevron folds
Strata Opppositions Crackington
Salthouse N end Widemouth Bay.