Menevian Group

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Menevian Group
Stratigraphic range: St Davids Epoch Cambrian
Mudstones of the Menevia Formation exposed in Porth y Rhaw, west of Solva
TypeGroup
Sub-unitsUpper, Middle, Lower (informal)
UnderliesLingula Flags
OverliesSolva Group
Thicknessabout 230m
Lithology
Primarymudstones
Othertuffaceous sandstone
Location
RegionSouth West Wales
CountryWales
Type section
Named forSt Davids (Roman name for area)

The Menevian Group is a

rock strata) in west Wales. The name is derived from Menevia, the Roman name for the St Davids area north of St Brides Bay on Pembrokeshire’s west coast where the strata are well exposed in coastal cliffs. This rock succession has previously been known variously as the Menevian Series and Menevian Beds and largely ascribed to the British regional stratigraphic unit St David’s Epoch, though these terms are now obsolete.[1]

Outcrops

The rock succession is exposed, along the coast southeast of St Davids and in particular at

Newgale and again in the Wolf's Castle area.[2]

Lithology and stratigraphy

The Group comprises over two hundred metres thickness of

pyritous and have been equated with the Clogau Formation which crops out near Harlech, both indicating that the floor of the Welsh Basin was oxygen-poor and the waters were becoming deeper.[3] Trilobite fossils are recorded throughout the sequence whilst the sandstones of the upper Menevian contain brachiopod fossils.[4]

References

  1. ^ "Menevian Group". The BGS Lexicon of Named Rock Units. British Geological Survey. Retrieved Oct 11, 2013.
  2. ^ British Geological Survey 1:50,000 scale geological map (England & Wales) sheets 209 St David's, 210 Fishguard
  3. .
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