| A section of
the Lower Gault in West Sussex The
Gault clay is one of the most fossiliferous horizons in
Britain. It was laid down approximately 120 million years
ago during the Albian stage of the Lower Cretaceous
period. Geologist's split the Gault clay into the Lower
and Upper Gault. The Lower Gault is a dark,
fossiliferous, blue-grey clay that was deposited during
the Middle Albian. It is famous for its abundance of well
preserved fossils that include bivalves, brachiopods,
gastropods, cephalopods, echinoids, crustaceans, fish
teeth and bones and reptile remains. The thickest
deposits of Lower Gault clay outcrop in Sussex in
South-East England where almost the entire sequence has
been exposed in a clay pit near the small village of
Small Dole. This pit was formerly dug to make cement but
is now a landfill site. The photograph (right) shows the
pit in 1993 when beds of the spathi Subzone were
exposed revealing exquisitely preserved ammonites of the
Hoplitidae family.
The site had produced
remarkably well preserved fossils for many years.
Visitors to the site would find many ammonite body
chambers scattered across the floor of the pit.
Examination of the stiff, dark clays would reveal
beautiful irridescent impressions of ammonites and other
fossils, particularly the bivalve Inoceramus. The best
preserved fossils, however, were found within mudstone
concretions that only outcropped at certain horizons. The most exquisite ammonite specimens came from
within or close to the concretionary layers in the lower
part of the spathi Subzone, designated as
Divisions 3(ii) and 3(iv) by Owen in his 'Middle Albian
Stratigraphy in the Anglo-Paris Basin' (1971). These
Divisions were revealed between 1992 to 1994 when a
series of cells were dug along the northern side of the
pit for the disposal of domestic waste. The photograph
(left) shows fragments of a typical concretion next to a
spade handle for scale. The white box surrounds an
ammonite identified as Hoplites dentatus that
measured approximately 6" (15 cm) across. It was
found on the topside of the concretion. The presence of
the concretionary layers can be explained by the cyclic
nature of the deposition in these Lower Cretaceous seas.
The fine clays were formed in periods of relatively rapid
sedimentation whilst the concretions formed when
deposition was partly arrested. The clays are highly
feruginous in nature such that the clay-ironstone
concretions often weather red when exposed to the
elements. The ammonites in these concretions often have
white aragonitic shells such that they strongly contrast
against the reddish matrix. Some ammonites were found
loose in the clays close to the concretionary layers.
Many of these had pale pink irridescent shells that
scintillated rainbow colours. When the shell was removed
their internal chambers were found to be infilled with
calcite crystal, whose colour ranged from yellow and
amber to deep brown. Some of the larger ammonites
(particularly the spiny Hoplites maritimus)
exceeded 9" (23 cm) in diameter. At one horizon,
lenticular mudstone concretions were common and were
found to contain clusters of ammonites, though many had
crushed body chambers. Over
the period 1992 to 1994 we collected several hundred
Hoplitid ammonite specimens that included the zonal
ammonite Hoplites dentatus, the rotund Hoplites
paronai and the spiny Hoplites maritimus.
The final cell along the north side of the pit was
completed in 1994. Whilst the other cells were filled
with waste this final cell was left for several months.
The photograph (right) shows the cell floor after
considerable weathering. Note the reddish brown fragments
from a band of ironstone concretions in the foreground
and channels in the clay caused by rain water. Countless
smaller fossils were washed out during this period. These
included small irridescent Hoplitids and heteromorph
ammonites, gastropods, solitary corals, belemnites,
bivalves, fish and shark teeth and crustaceans. The rule
in the foreground measures 1 metre. Shortly after this
photograph was taken the cell became inaccessible. The
fossiliferous beds of Divisions 3(ii) and 3(iv) are now
no longer exposed. Subsequent cells were dug to the south
but as the Gault clay dips in this direction, the new
exposures were in much higher beds where fossils were
less well preserved. The site is now finished and most of
the cells are filled with waste. One small corner of the
pit has been left as a 'Site of Special Scientific
Interest' (SSSI) but little if anything is to be found
there.
The following
photographs show some of the ammonites that were
collected during the 1992 to 1994 period. From left to
right they are: Hoplites paronai, Hoplites vectensis,
Hoplites dentatus, Hoplites maritimus.
   
For further information
see: Owen H.G.: 'Middle Albian stratigraphy in the
Anglo-Paris basin' Bulletin of the British Museum
(Natural History) Geology Supplement 8. London 1971.
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