Much Wenlock Limestone Formation

The Much Wenlock Limestone Formation is a series of Silurian limestone beds that date back to the Homerian age, the later part of the Wenlock epoch.[1][2] The formation comprises nodular to thinly bedded limestones, with variable development of reef bodies that can be found exposed at Wenlock Edge and in a small area near Dudley, England. The formation is made up of three different members which have been classified as the Lower Quarried Limestone Member, the Nodular Beds Member and the Upper Quarried Limestone Member.[3] Many of the members can be subdivided into separate lithofacies that would have been deposited under different environmental conditions. However the overall environment of deposition for the formation is in a shallow, tropical marine setting that is located between the storm wave base and the fair weather wave base.

Much Wenlock Limestone Formation
Stratigraphic range: Wenlock
Limestones of the Much Wenlock Formation exposed in Farley Quarry, Shropshire
TypeGeological formation
UnderliesElton Formation
OverliesCoalbrookdale Formation
Thickness29 m in type area
Lithology
PrimaryLimestone
Location
RegionWelsh Marches
CountryUnited Kingdom
Type section
Named forMuch Wenlock

References

  1. Ratcliffe, K. T. and Thomas, A. T. 1999. Carbonate depositional environments in the late Wenlock of England and Wales. Geological Magazine, 136, 189-204.
  2. "Much Wenlock Limestone Formation". The BGS Lexicon of Named Rock Units. British Geological Survey. 2013. Retrieved 11 July 2013.
  3. Dorning, K. J. 1983. Palynology and stratigraphy of the Much Wenlock Limestone Formation, Dudley, Central England. Mercian Geologist, 20, 31-40.
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