| An Exposure in
the Kellaways Formation This
page presents a fossil locality in the Kellaways
Formation. The site (pictured right) is one of several
Kellaways exposures in Southern England and is a rich
hunting ground for ammonite fossils. The Kellaways
Formation (named after the Wiltshire village of
Kellaways) consists of marine clays and sandstone
deposits of Lower Callovian (Mid-Jurassic) age. These
deposits are approximately 165 million years old! The
site featured has Kellaways clays outcropping beneath
several metres of Pleistocene gravels (visible within the
quarry face on the right of the picture). Mammoth remains
such as teeth, bone and fragments of tusk have been
recovered from these gravels. Within the clays in the
floor of the quarry are large mudstone concretions. It is
within these Jurassic tombs of stone that one can
occasionally find beautifully preserved ammonites.
The following
photographs show in sequence the outcome of a typical
collecting trip. On this particular day, and indeed on
most days, the collecting ground lies underwater. The floor of the quarry is a lake of liquid mud
that can totally spoil your afternoon if you stand in the
wrong place! The lake of mud is clearly visible within
the next picture (left). Here Neville stands on an
'island' of Kellaways clay as an excavator assists in the
removal of several large (and fossiliferous) mudstone
concretions. These concretions have shelly undersides
that are rich in brachiopod and bivalve fossils. They
vary in size, but typically can measure 1.5 metres across
and 30 cm deep which makes their removal and manipulation
extremely difficult. Generally we turn them on one side
and then cleave them using a chisel and sledge hammer. If
all goes according to plan the concretion will open like
a book enabling the fossils inside to 'see' daylight for
the first time in 165 million years! Approximately one in
three will contain a large Kepplerites ammonite (12 cm
diameter) preserved in yellow and brown calcite with a
white aragonite shell. Occasionally clusters of
Kepplerites will be found nestled together. The
concretions also yield the round robust ammonite known as
'Cadoceras' and the slim serpenticone ammonite
'Proplanulites'. Fossilised wood is common and is
indicative of the close proximity of the mainland in
those times.
The Kepplerites
ammonites within these concretions are known as Kepplerites
galilaeii. This
is the index fossil for this horizon. Close by within a higher shelly
layer it is possible to find specimens of Sigaloceras
calloviense which marks the highest (or youngest) zone in
the Kellaways Formation. The picture on the right shows
the remains of one large shelly concretion after it had
been reduced in size. The arrow indicates a specimen of
Kepplerites galilaeii and a 'two pound' geological hammer
is shown for scale. The white 'speckles' on the
concretion are brachiopod fossils.
The final picture on
this page shows a close-up of a Cadoceras ammonite found
on the same day. When it is finally prepared in the
workshop, it will be left in its surrounding matrix,
which also contains a large piece of fossil wood. The
ammonite measures 5 cm across.
|