Inferior Oolite Explained

Inferior Oolite Group
Type:Group
Age: (Middle Jurassic)
Period:Middle Jurassic
Prilithology:limestones
Otherlithology:sandstone, mudstone
Country:England
Subunits:East Midlands

Cotswolds

  • Salperton Limestone
  • Aston Limestone
  • Birdlip Limestone

Dorset -Lower, Upper Inferior Oolite Formations

Underlies:Great Oolite Group
Overlies:Lias Group
Thickness:0 - 120 m

The Inferior Oolite is a sequence of Jurassic age sedimentary rocks in Europe. It was deposited during the Middle Jurassic.[1] The Inferior Oolite Group as more recently defined is a Jurassic lithostratigraphic group (a sequence of rock strata) in southern and eastern England . It has been variously known in the past as the Under Oolite (or Oolyte), the Inferior Oolite, the Inferior Oolite Series and the Redbourne Group.[2]

Outcrops

The rocks are exposed from Dorset and Somerset eastwards and northwards through the English Midlands to Yorkshire.[3] It is present at depth in the Wessex-Weald Basin, where it reaches its greatest thickness of 120 m.

Lithology and stratigraphy

The group consists of up to 120 m thickness of oolitic limestones and subordinate sandstones and mudstones laid down during the Jurassic Period. In the East Midlands it consists of (in descending order i.e. oldest last) the Lincolnshire Limestone, Grantham and Northampton Sand formations whereas in the Cotswold Hills it consists of the Salperton Limestone, Aston Limestone and Birdlip Limestone formations.[4] [5] The limestones are rich in organic material. The ammonite Parkinsonia parkinsoni, an index fossil for the Bathonian,[6] is native to the Inferior Oolite of Burton Bradstock.

Within Dorset, the Oolite is not subdivided into separately named formations, but is simply considered the Inferior Oolite Formation, sometimes subdivided into the Lower and Upper Inferior Oolite Formations. Within the vicinity of Yeovil it is divided into members which are in ascending order the Corton Denham Member, which predominantly consists of blue siltstone is about 2.5 m thick with the transitional top consisting of green Marl, the Oborne Ironshot Member, the term "ironshot" refers to ferruginised Oolite.[7] The upper portion of which contains intensely bioturbated limestone. Moving Into the Upper Inferior Oolite the Sherborne Limestone Member, which consists of exposed yellow brown fresh grey bioclastic limestone, while the overlying Combe Limestone Member, consists of rubbly limestone and marl, a full stratigraphy of the locality is given below

Stratigraphy of the Inferior Oolite at Frogden Quarry, Dorset[8]
FormationMemberBedLithologyThicknessAmmonite Zone
Upper Inferior Oolite FormationCombe Limestone MemberBroken limestone and marlOver 5.6 metresGarantiana Zone-Parkinsoni Zone
Sherborne Limestone MemberRedhole Lane BedsBlocky Limestone2 metresGarantiana Zone, Dichotoma Subzone
Sherborne Building Stone BedsMottled, blocky limestone~1.5 metres
Acanthothyris Beds"Brown sandy biomicrites interbedded with brown marls"Up to 1.5 metres
Lower Inferior Oolite FormationOborne Ironshot MemberOborne Road Stone BedBioturbated and intensely burrowed limestone~0.8 metresNiortense Zone
Frogden Ironshot BedFerruginous oolite~1.2 metresSauzei to Humphriesianum Zones
Corton Denham MemberGreen Grained White MarlMarl0.01-0.15 metresLaeviuscula Zone
Blue BedVery hard blue intensely burrowed siltstone0.85-1 metreLaeviuscula Zone, Trigonalis Subzone
Corton Denham BedsLenticular hard blue-grey siltstone, in channels. separated by nodular siltstoneSeen to 2 metresConcavum-Ovale Zones

Vertebrate fauna

Ornithopod tracks geographically located in North Yorkshire, England.[1] Ornithopod and theropod tracks present in North Yorkshire, England. A supposed dermal spine long thought to be from a stegosaur is actually a caudal vertebra referable to Archosauria indet.

Dinosaurs of the Inferior Oolite
GenusSpeciesLocationStratigraphic positionMaterialNotesImages
CetiosaurusC. epioolithicus
  • North Yorkshire, England.[9]
Indeterminate
  • Wiltshire, England.[10]
DuriavenatorD. hesperis
  • Dorset, England.
"Skull elements."[11]
MagnosaurusM. nethercombensis
  • Dorset, England.[12]
"Dentaries, vertebrae, pubis, femora, [and] tibiae."
MegalosaurusM. hesperis
  • Dorset, England.
"Skull elements."Moved to the new genus Duriavenator in 2008.
Indeterminate
  • Northamptonshire, England.[13]
  • Somerset, England.[14]
Indeterminate Megalosaurid material.
ThyreophoraIndeterminate[15]
  • Dorset, England.

See also

References

Notes and References

  1. Weishampel, David B; et al. (2004). "Dinosaur distribution (Middle Jurassic, Europe)." In: Weishampel, David B.; Dodson, Peter; and Osmólska, Halszka (eds.): The Dinosauria, 2nd, Berkeley: University of California Press. Pp. 538–541. .
  2. Waters, C.N. et al. 2007 Stratigraphical Chart of the United Kingdom: Southern Britain British Geological Survey (poster)
  3. British Geological Survey 1:50,000 scale geological map (England & Wales) sheets
  4. Web site: . Inferior Oolite Group . BGS Lexicon of Named Rock Units. 5 January 2023.
  5. Waters, C.N. et al 2007 Stratigraphical Chart of the United Kingdom:Southern Britain British Geological Survey (poster)
  6. Wynn Jones, R: Applied Paleontology. page 146, Cambridge University Press
  7. Web site: Upper Inferior Oolite, Middle Jurassic, Bristol and Gloucester region - Earthwise. earthwise.bgs.ac.uk. 2019-10-08.
  8. Chandler. Robert B.. Whicher. John. Dodge. Martin. Dietze. Volker. 2014-11-01. Revision of the stratigraphy of the Inferior Oolite at Frogden Quarry, Oborne, Dorset, UK. Neues Jahrbuch für Geologie und Paläontologie - Abhandlungen. 274. 2. 133–148. 10.1127/0077-7749/2014/0429. 0077-7749.
  9. "Dinosaur distribution (Middle Jurassic; Europe; North Yorkshire, England)." Weishampel, et al. (2004). Page 539.
  10. "Dinosaur distribution (Middle Jurassic; Europe; Wiltshire, England)." Weishampel, et al. (2004). Page 540.
  11. "Table 4.1," in Weishampel, et al. (2004). Page 73.
  12. "Dinosaur distribution (Middle Jurassic; Europe; Dorset, England)." Weishampel, et al. (2004). Page 539.
  13. "Dinosaur distribution (Middle Jurassic; Europe; Northamptonshire, England)." Weishampel, et al. (2004). Pages 539-540.
  14. "Dinosaur distribution (Middle Jurassic; Europe; Somerset, England)." Weishampel, et al. (2004). Page 538.
  15. Peter M. Galton (2017). "Purported earliest bones of a plated dinosaur (Ornithischia: Stegosauria): a "dermal tail spine" and a centrum from the Aalenian-Bajocian (Middle Jurassic) of England, with comments on other early thyreophorans". Neues Jahrbuch für Geologie und Paläontologie - Abhandlungen. 285 (1): 1–10. doi:10.1127/njgpa/2017/0667.