Facies change in upper devonian and lower carboniferous rocks of Southern Ireland |
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Authors: | D. Naylor |
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Abstract: | In south-west Ireland 8,000 ft (2,440 m) of marine sandstones and mudstones, the Cork Beds (?Upper Famennian to E Zone, Carboniferous, in age), overlie the Old Red Sandstone. Farther north the Old Red Sandstone is succeeded by thin Lower Limestone Shales overlain by thick Waulsortian bank limestones. A critical section (North Ringabella) west of Cork Harbour, in which 6,500 ft (1,981 m) of Old Red Sandstone and Cork Beds is exposed, is described and divided into ten formations. By comparison with sections to the south the upper beds of the Old Red Sandstone are shown to pass southward into marine sandstones (Cork Beds) of ?Upper Famennian age. The successions in the Cloyne and Cork Synclines are described and reveal the progressive northward change in the Lower Carboniferous from the argillaceous Cork Facies through a zone of isolated bank limestones (Cloyne) to a thick, 4,000 ft (1,219 m), Waulsortian bank complex (Cork). Finally an attempt is made with use of isopachyte maps to reconstruct the palaeogeography of southern Ireland in Upper Devonian and Lower Carboniferous times. |
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