David Wilson’s research while affiliated with British Geological Survey and other places

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Publications (9)


The Corwen Outlier and its implications for the Mid Mississippian palaeogeography of North Wales, UK
  • Article

May 2014

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58 Reads

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4 Citations

Geological Journal

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David Wilson

The isolated outlier of Visean (Mid Mississippian) limestones and sandstones near Corwen, North Wales, UK, provides a critical constraint on regional tectonic and palaeogeographical models. The late Asbian to Brigantian succession comprises a series of shoaling-upwards cycles (parasequences). These were the product of forced, glacioeustatic regressions and have boundaries that testify to emergence, karstic dissolution and soil formation on a low gradient carbonate platform prior to flooding and the resumption of marine deposition. The recognition of two of the main marker beds within the North Wales Visean succession (Main Shale and Coral Bed) together with a newly applied foraminiferal and algal biozonation allow the outlier succession to be correlated with other Visean outcrops in the region and more widely throughout the British Isles. In revealing regional thickness and facies variations, these comparisons show that the outlier succession was deposited landward of the early Asbian shoreline in a region of enhanced subsidence localized along the Bala Lineament. The Corwen Outlier suggests that, within narrow gulfs associated with the region's major tectonic lineaments, Mississippian carbonate facies extended farther south into the contemporary hinterland of older rocks and that, in response to Brigantian climate change, these topographic features likely also influenced fluvial catchments supplying siliciclastic sediment to the platform's landward margin and, subsequently, Namurian deltas. Contrary to earlier suggestions, Visean outcrop patterns, facies distributions and thicknesses in the vicinity of the Bala Lineament can be explained without the need to invoke extensive post-depositional lateral displacements. BGS © NERC 2013. Geological Journal © John Wiley & Sons Ltd.


Sedimentary and faunal events revealed by a revised correlation of post‐glacial Hirnantian (Late Ordovician) strata in the Welsh Basin, UK

May 2009

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169 Reads

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14 Citations

Geological Journal

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Richard A. Waters

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[...]

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The discovery of a previously unrecognized unconformity and of new faunas in the type Llandovery area underpins a revised correlation of Hirnantian strata in mid Wales. This has revealed the sedimentary and faunal events which affected the Lower Palaeozoic Welsh Basin during the global rise in sea level that followed the end‐Ordovician glacial maximum and has allowed their interpretation in the context of local and global influences. In peri‐basinal shelfal settings the onset of post‐glacial deepening is recorded by an unfossiliferous, transgressive shoreface sequence (Cwm Clyd Sandstone and Garth House formations) which rests unconformably on Rawtheyan rocks, deformed during an episode of pre‐Hirnantian tectonism. In the deep water facies of the basin centre, this same sequence boundary is now recognized as the contact between fine‐grained, re‐sedimented mudstones and an underlying regressive sequence of turbidite sandstones and conglomerates; it is at a level lower than previously cited and calls into question the established lithostratigraphy. In younger Hirnantian strata, graptolites associated with the newly recognized Ystradwalter Member (Chwefri Formation) demonstrate that this distal shelf unit correlates with the persculptus graptolite‐bearing Mottled Mudstone Member of the basinal succession. Together these members record an important macrofaunal recolonization of the Welsh Basin and mark a key event in the post‐glacial transgression. Further deepening saw the establishment of a stratified water column and the imposition of anoxic bottom water conditions across the basin floor. These post‐glacial Hirnantian events are consistent with the re‐establishment of connections between a silled Welsh Basin and the open Iapetus Ocean. However, a comparison with other areas suggests that each event records a separate deepening episode within a pulsed glacio‐eustatic transgression, while also reflecting changes in post‐glacial climate and patterns of oceanic circulation and associated biotic flux. British Geological Survey © NERC 2009. All rights reserved.





Devensian glacigenic sedimentation and landscape evolution in the Cardigan area of southwest Wales

July 2001

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53 Reads

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26 Citations

Journal of Quaternary Science

The depositional processes associated with late Devensian ice in areas bordering the Irish Sea basin have been the subject of considerable debate. Among the key areas around the Irish Sea, southwest Wales occupies a particularly crucial position because it is here that ice flowing from the north impinged upon the coast orthogonally and encroached inland. Two main hypotheses have emerged concerning deglaciation of the Irish Sea basin. The traditional hypothesis holds that sedimentation was ice-marginal or subglacial, whereas an alternative hypothesis that emerged in the 1980s argued that sedimentation was glaciomarine. Southwest Wales is well-placed to contribute to this debate. However, few detailed sedimentological studies, linked to topography, have been made previously in order to reconstruct glacial environments in this area. In this paper, evidence is presented from four boreholes drilled recently in the Cardigan area, combined with data from coastal and inland exposures in the lower Teifi valley and adjacent areas. A complex history of glaciation has emerged: (i) subglacial drainage channel formation in pre-Devensian time, (ii) deposition of iron-cemented breccias and conglomerates possibly during the last interglacial (or in the early/mid-Devensian interstadial), (iii) late Devensian ice advance across the region, during which a glaciolacustrine sequence over 75 m thick accumulated, within a glacial lake known as Llyn Teifi, (iv) a second high-level glaciolacustrine succession formed near Llandudoch, (v) outside the Teifi valley, ice-marginal, subglacial and glaciofluvial sediments were also laid down, providing a near-continuous cover of drift throughout the area. Glacial advance was characterized by reworking, deformation and sometimes erosion of the underlying sediments. The glaciomarine hypothesis is thus rejected for southwest Wales. Copyright (C) 2001 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.


Late Devensian glacigenic sedimentation in the Cardigan area of southwest Wales

July 2001

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37 Reads

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32 Citations

Journal of Quaternary Science

The depositional processes associated with late Devensian ice in areas bordering the Irish Sea basin have been the subject of considerable debate. Among the key areas around the Irish Sea, southwest Wales occupies a particularly crucial position because it is here that ice flowing from the north impinged upon the coast orthogonally and encroached inland. Two main hypotheses have emerged concerning deglaciation of the Irish Sea basin. The traditional hypothesis holds that sedimentation was ice-marginal or subglacial, whereas an alternative hypothesis that emerged in the 1980s argued that sedimentation was glaciomarine. Southwest Wales is well-placed to contribute to this debate. However, few detailed sedimentological studies, linked to topography, have been made previously in order to reconstruct glacial environments in this area. In this paper, evidence is presented from four boreholes drilled recently in the Cardigan area, combined with data from coastal and inland exposures in the lower Teifi valley and adjacent areas. A complex history of glaciation has emerged: (i) subglacial drainage channel formation in pre-Devensian time, (ii) deposition of iron-cemented breccias and conglomerates possibly during the last interglacial (or in the early/mid-Devensian interstadial), (iii) late Devensian ice advance across the region, during which a glaciolacustrine sequence over 75 m thick accumulated, within a glacial lake known as Llyn Teifi, (iv) a second high-level glaciolacustrine succession formed near Llandudoch, (v) outside the Teifi valley, ice-marginal, subglacial and glaciofluvial sediments were also laid down, providing a near-continuous cover of drift throughout the area. Glacial advance was characterized by reworking, deformation and sometimes erosion of the underlying sediments. The glaciomarine hypothesis is thus rejected for southwest Wales. Copyright © 2001 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.



Citations (8)


... Glacitectonized deglacial subaqueous facies are characteristic of many areas of the last BIIS where it underwent retreat in a marginal glacimarine or glacilacustrine environment (e.g. Hambrey et al., 2001;Ó Cofaigh and Evans, 2001;Evans and Ó Cofaigh, 2003;Roberts and Hart, 2005;Hiemstra et al., 2006;Chiverrell et al., 2018;Roberts et al., 2018;Ó Cofaigh et al., 2011Ó Cofaigh et al., , 2012bÓ Cofaigh et al., , 2019Callard et al., 2018Callard et al., , 2020. ...

Reference:

Timing and pace of ice‐sheet withdrawal across the marine–terrestrial transition west of Ireland during the last glaciation
Devensian glacigenic sedimentation and landscape evolution in the Cardigan area of southwest Wales
  • Citing Article
  • July 2001

Journal of Quaternary Science

... Mudstones and siltstones of artus to murchisoni Biozone age in the Builth Wells Inlier (Camnant Mudstone Formation; Fig. 5, column 15) were deposited in a range of environments from shallow marine to deeper offshore settings (Davies et al. 1997;Botting and Muir 2008). Faunas from these beds and the overlying Builth Volcanic Group and Llanfawr Mudstone Formation have been extensively documented (Botting and Muir 2008; Muir and Botting 2015 and references therein). ...

Geology of the country around Llanilar and Rhayader. Memoir of the British Geological Survey, Sheets 178 and 179 (England and Wales)
  • Citing Book
  • January 1997

... The chitinozoan biozonation presented herein also informs correlation of the Cardigan Bay succession (Cardigan to Llangrannog) of west Wales (BGS, 2003(BGS, , 2006Davies et al., 2003Davies et al., , 2006 with the easterly successions of the Tywi Anticline, Garth and Type Llandovery areas (Schofield et al., 2004;BGS, 2005BGS, , 2008Schofield et al., 2009;Davies et al., 2013) where graptolites are less common and many chronostratigraphic boundaries are poorly constrained. In addition, the mid-southern hemisphere palaeolatitude position of the Welsh Basin during the Late Ordovician makes the area important as a stepping stone between latitudinally restricted polar and tropical chitinozoan provinces that are difficult to correlate (Delabroye and Vecoli, 2010;Vandenbroucke et al., 2010;Ghienne et al., in press). ...

Geology of the Cardigan and Dinas Island district. Sheet Explanation of the British Geological Survey, Sheet 193 (England and Wales).
  • Citing Book
  • January 2003

... Slumping and dewatering structures in the lower portion of the member suggest that deposition was disturbed by the propagation of faults and associated earthquakes (Whittaker and Green, 1983). A widespread period of emergence is indicated by a desiccation crack horizon that can be mapped across the Severn Estuary area (Waters and Lawrence, 1987;Wilson et al., 1990;Gallois, 2009). ...

Geology of the South Wales Coalfield, Part VI, the country around Bridgend. Memoir of the British Geological Survey, Sheet 261 and 262 (England and Wales)
  • Citing Book
  • January 1990

... In East Anglia, it forms an outcrop beneath the mudstones and siltstones of the Gault Formation in southern and central Norfolk, and beneath the limestones of the Hunstanton Formation in northern Norfolk. It is generally up to about 5 m thick, but reaches its maximum thickness (18.9 m) in the Hunstanton area ( Fig. 1; Gallois 1994). ...

Geology of the Country around Flint. Memoir of the British Geological Survey, Sheet 108 (England and Wales)
  • Citing Book
  • January 2004

... In North Wales, the early Brigantian is mostly represented by the Cefn Mawr Limestone Formation (Fig. 4), which is well dated by means of corals, ammonoids and foraminifers (Somerville and Strank 1984;Davies et al. 2004Davies et al. , 2014, and is considered to range up to the P 1c Subzone. However, in the Bryn Mawr Quarry (Clwyd), the ammonoid Sudeticeras was recorded 10 m below the top of the formation, and attributed to the P 2b Subzone by Davies et al. (2004), and in the same region, Davies et al. (2014) recorded the foraminifers Biseriella parva from the upper 7th cycle of the formation (as defined in Somerville 1979), which is a typical late Brigantian marker in England (Fig. 2). ...

The Corwen Outlier and its implications for the Mid Mississippian palaeogeography of North Wales, UK
  • Citing Article
  • May 2014

Geological Journal

... 5, columns 10, 11) west of the Tywi Lineament were derived from the east and are equivalent to the upper part of the Nantmel Mudstones succession. They are interpreted as the deposits of small fault-controlled depressions that developed during the mid to late Ashgill Shelveian Event (Toghill 1992) of the Welsh Borderland, which is thought to record the collision of Baltica with Eastern Avalonia (Smallwood 1986;Toghill 1992;Schofield et al. 2004Schofield et al. , 2009Davies et al. 2009). The Tridwr Formation (see below) might also demonstrate the combined effects of late Ashgill tectonism and glacio-eustatic sea level changes, having been subjected to uplift and deformation, subaerial weathering and erosion prior to deposition of the transgressive late Hirnantian Cwm Clŷd Sandstone Across North Wales (Fig. 3), the Nod Glas Formation is overlain by bioturbated siliciclastic and calcareous mudstones and siltstones, locally with limestones and sandstones, that were deposited under oxygenated conditions in mid-to outer-shelf settings. ...

Sedimentary and faunal events revealed by a revised correlation of post‐glacial Hirnantian (Late Ordovician) strata in the Welsh Basin, UK
  • Citing Article
  • May 2009

Geological Journal

... Reconstructions indicate that Wales was repeatedly covered by a terrestrially based Welsh Ice Cap (e.g. McCarroll and Ballantyne, 2000; Hambrey et al., 2001; Jansson and Glasser, 2005; 2008), in addition to the Irish Sea Glacier that encroached on the coast (e.g. Bowen, 1973; 1977; Thomas, 1985; 2005; Eyles and McCabe, 1989; Lambeck, 1995; Glasser et al., 2001; Etienne et al., 2006). ...

Late Devensian glacigenic sedimentation in the Cardigan area of southwest Wales
  • Citing Article
  • July 2001

Journal of Quaternary Science