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The Bouldnor Formation is a geological
formation Formation may refer to: Linguistics * Back-formation, the process of creating a new lexeme by removing or affixes * Word formation, the creation of a new word by adding affixes Mathematics and science * Cave formation or speleothem, a secondary ...
in the Hampshire Basin of southern England. It is the youngest formation of the
Solent Group The Solent Group is a geological group in the Hampshire Basin of southern England. It preserves fossils ranging in age from Priabonian (uppermost Eocene) to Rupelian (lower Oligocene). The group is subdivided into three formations, the Headon Hi ...
and was deposited during the uppermost Eocene and lower
Oligocene The Oligocene ( ) is a geologic epoch of the Paleogene Period and extends from about 33.9 million to 23 million years before the present ( to ). As with other older geologic periods, the rock beds that define the epoch are well identified but the ...
.


Stratotype and occurrence

The Bouldnor Formation was named after Bouldnor, a small hamlet east of
Yarmouth Yarmouth may refer to: Places Canada *Yarmouth County, Nova Scotia **Yarmouth, Nova Scotia **Municipality of the District of Yarmouth **Yarmouth (provincial electoral district) **Yarmouth (electoral district) * Yarmouth Township, Ontario *New ...
, Isle of Wight. The formation is exposed along ''Bouldnor Cliff'' between Yarmouth and Hamstead occupying the core of the east-southeast-striking ''Bouldnor Syncline''. Yet the stratotype of the formation is found at ''Whitecliff Bay'' on the east side of the Isle of Wight.


History

The Bouldnor Formation was scientifically established 1985 by A. Insole and B. Daly, who also defined its members. The
paleogene The Paleogene ( ; British English, also spelled Palaeogene or Palæogene; informally Lower Tertiary or Early Tertiary) is a geologic period, geologic period and system that spans 43 million years from the end of the Cretaceous Period million yea ...
strata on the Isle of Wight had already been described in 1853 by Edward Forbes. Forbes was followed in 1921 by H.J.O. White, a geologist from the Geological Survey.


Stratigraphy

The Bouldnor-Formation is the topmost formation of the
Solent Group The Solent Group is a geological group in the Hampshire Basin of southern England. It preserves fossils ranging in age from Priabonian (uppermost Eocene) to Rupelian (lower Oligocene). The group is subdivided into three formations, the Headon Hi ...
before the sea withdrew completely from the Hampshire Basin. The thickness of the formation can vary between 45 and 115 metres. After a long hiatus Pleistocene and Holocene sediments covered the formation discordantly. The Bouldnor Formation lies concordantly on
desiccation crack Mudcracks (also known as mud cracks, desiccation cracks or cracked mud) are sedimentary structures formed as muddy sediment dries and contracts.Jackson, J.A., 1997, ''Glossary of Geology'' (4th ed.), American Geological Institute, Alexandria, VA, ...
s of the upper Bembridge Limestone ( Bembridge Limestone Formation), a freshwater deposit. The formation consists mainly of clays with some intercalated sands which were sedimented along a coastal plain in lagoonal and lacustrine/ palustrine facies judging by the enclosed freshwater, brackish and marine biota. Marine conditions were only rarely achieved, examples being the ''Bembridge Oyster Bed'', the ''Nematura Bed'' and sections of the upper Cranmore Member. A very diversified and well preserved biota can be found within the Bouldnor Formation comprising molluscs, vertebrates (especially mammals),
charophytes Charophyta () is a group of freshwater green algae, called charophytes (), sometimes treated as a phylum, division, yet also as a superdivision or an unranked clade. The terrestrial plants, the Embryophyta emerged within Charophyta, possibly fro ...
and vascular plants. The nonmarine layers are characterized by gastropods like Australorbis, Lymnaea/Galba and Viviparus and ostracods like Gandona, Cypridopsis and Moenocypris. In the middle section (i.e. in the Hamstead Member) the effects of the Grande Coupure on the biota are clearly noticeable and follow immediately after the negative oxygen excursion Oi-1 at the beginning of the Oligocene.
Stratigraphically Stratigraphy is a branch of geology concerned with the study of rock layers (strata) and layering (stratification). It is primarily used in the study of sedimentary and layered volcanic rocks. Stratigraphy has three related subfields: lithostrati ...
the Bouldnor Formation is subdivided into three members (from top to bottom): * Cranmore Member * Hamstead Member * Bembridge Marls Member


Bembridge Marls Member

The basal, 20 to 23 metres, exceptionally-35 metres-thick Bembridge Marls Member is mainly composed of blueish to greenish-gray clays and
marl Marl is an earthy material rich in carbonate minerals, clays, and silt. When hardened into rock, this becomes marlstone. It is formed in marine or freshwater environments, often through the activities of algae. Marl makes up the lower part o ...
s. Interlaced are several mollusc-bearing horizons. The clays show a rhythmical, varve-like layering. The member overlies the summital mudcracks of the Bembridge Limestone Formation without any discontinuity. It correlates magnetostratigraphically with the upper part of chron C 13r and biostratigraphically with the calcareous nannoplanktonzone NP21. The member therefore belongs to the upper
Priabonian The Priabonian is, in the ICS's geologic timescale, the latest age or the upper stage of the Eocene Epoch or Series. It spans the time between . The Priabonian is preceded by the Bartonian and is followed by the Rupelian, the lowest stage of t ...
and has an absolute age of 34.0 to 33.75 million years BP. The Bembridge Marls Member was mainly sedimented in fresh or brackish water as indicated by cirripedia and gastropods like Terebia. The lower section of the member is of
estuarine An estuary is a partially enclosed coastal body of brackish water with one or more rivers or streams flowing into it, and with a free connection to the open sea. Estuaries form a transition zone between river environments and maritime environment ...
origin, whereas the upper section was laid down by rivers inhabited by prosobranchs like Viviparus. Relatively short-lived marine inraids are recognizable in horizons like the ''Bembridge Oyster Bed'' 1.5 metres above the base and a limestone band with bivalves like Corbicula and Nucula. Amongst the fish Amia sp. and other amiids have been found The fossil contents of the Bembridge Marls Member are quite varied, with freshwater species like Lymnaea and
Unio Unio may refer to: * ''Unio'' (bivalve), a genus of freshwater mussels * ''Unio'' (sternwheeler), a steamboat that operated in Oregon, United States, in 1861, before being renamed ''Union'' * UNI/O, an asynchronous serial bus * UNIO Satu Mare, a ...
and marine taxa like Melanopsis, Meretrix and Ostrea. The ''Bembridge Insect Bed'' at the base of the member is a marly sand layer with a very rich insect fauna and many
leaves A leaf (plural, : leaves) is any of the principal appendages of a vascular plant plant stem, stem, usually borne laterally aboveground and specialized for photosynthesis. Leaves are collectively called foliage, as in "autumn foliage", wh ...
. This layer constitutes a lagerstätte with very good preservation. Amongst the finds are
coleoptera Beetles are insects that form the order Coleoptera (), in the superorder Endopterygota. Their front pair of wings are hardened into wing-cases, elytra, distinguishing them from most other insects. The Coleoptera, with about 400,000 describ ...
,
diptera Flies are insects of the order Diptera, the name being derived from the Greek δι- ''di-'' "two", and πτερόν ''pteron'' "wing". Insects of this order use only a single pair of wings to fly, the hindwings having evolved into advanced ...
,
hymenoptera Hymenoptera is a large order (biology), order of insects, comprising the sawfly, sawflies, wasps, bees, and ants. Over 150,000 living species of Hymenoptera have been described, in addition to over 2,000 extinct ones. Many of the species are Par ...
and
arthropods Arthropods (, (gen. ποδός)) are invertebrate animals with an exoskeleton, a Segmentation (biology), segmented body, and paired jointed appendages. Arthropods form the phylum Arthropoda. They are distinguished by their jointed limbs and Arth ...
as for instance '' Aeschnophlebia andeasi'', '' Oligoaeschna anglica'' and '' Vectaraneus yulei''. Plant remains within the member include palm seeds and the fern
Acrostichum ''Acrostichum'' is a fern genus in the Parkerioideae subfamily of the Pteridaceae. It was one of the original pteridophyte genera delineated by Linnaeus. It was originally drawn very broadly, including all ferns that had sori apparently "ac ...
. Amongst the mammals are '' Anoplotherium latipes'', '' Bransatoglis bahloi'', '' Choeropotamus parisiensis'', '' Ectropomys exiguus'', '' Gesneropithex sp.'', '' Glamys devoogdi'', '' Haplomeryx zitteli'', ''
Heterohyus ''Heterohyus'' is an extinct genus of apatemyid from the early to late Eocene. A small, tree-dwelling creature with elongated fore- and middle fingers, in these regards it somewhat resembled a modern-day aye-aye. Three skeletons have been found a ...
'', '' Microchoerus edwardsi'', '' Palaeotherium medium'', '' Paroxacron sp.'', ''
Peratherium ''Peratherium'' is a genus of metatherian mammals in the family Herpetotheriidae that lived in Europe and Africa from the Early Eocene In the geologic timescale the Ypresian is the oldest age or lowest stratigraphic stage of the Eocene. It ...
'', '' Plagiolophus major'', '' Plagiolophus minor'', '' Saturninia gracilis'', '' Suevosciurus ehingensis'', '' Tarnomys schmidtkittleri'', '' Theridomys bonduelli'' and '' Treposciurus''.


Hamstead Member

The 20 to 70 meter thick Hamstead Member is divided in two by the ''Nematura bed'' (rich in '' Nematura parvula'').


Lower Hamstead Member

The 10-meter-thick ''Lower Hamstead Member'' follows directly upon the Bembridge Marls Member with a 40-centimetre-thick olive to black seam, the ''Black Band''. This layer is very rich in organic matter and was deposited under freshwater conditions. At its base it carries
calcrete Caliche () is a sedimentary rock, a hardened natural cement of calcium carbonate that binds other materials—such as gravel, sand, clay, and silt. It occurs worldwide, in aridisol and mollisol soil orders—generally in arid or semiarid regions, ...
nodules and rootlets. The Black Band is overlain by roughly 4 metres of a greenish-greyish clay- silt interlayering. This changes to 3 metres of blue to brown, finely laminated clays including some shelly horizons. These clays are capped by a 1-metre-thick, blueish-greyish, clayey sand layer with ball-and-pillow-structure, contorted bedding and
convolute bedding {{Short description, Geologic formation Soft-sediment deformation structures develop at deposition or shortly after, during the first stages of the sediment's consolidation. This is because the sediments need to be "liquid-like" or unsolidified ...
indicating dewatering of the sediment during diagenesis. This gravitationally unstable bed is known as the ''log bed'' for its up to 5-metre-long tree trunks. The log bed is clearly a freshwater deposit as it contains besides the tree trunks plenty of washed-up seeds of the species
Potamogeton ''Potamogeton'' is a genus of aquatic, mostly freshwater, plants of the family Potamogetonaceae. Most are known by the common name pondweed, although many unrelated plants may be called pondweed, such as Canadian pondweed (''Elodea canadensis'' ...
and Stratiodes, and also the leaves of monocotyledon and dicotyledon plants. Its faunal remains attest the last pre-Grande Coupure assemblage (MP20). After a distinct hiatus follows unconformably the ''Nematura bed'' which closes the Lower Hamstead Member. This bed is almost 1 meter thick and is characterized by chocolate-brown ripple marks enclosed in alternating clays and sands. It attests brackish conditions with a lot of reworked wood debris. Besides molluscs like ''Nematura'' (now
Stenothyra ''Stenothyra'' is a genus of freshwater snails which have a gill and an operculum, aquatic gastropod mollusks in the family Stenothyridae.Bouchet, P. (2014). Stenothyra Benson, 1856. Accessed through: World Register of Marine Species at http:// ...
) and
Polymesoda ''Polymesoda'' is a genus of clams in the family Cyrenidae.Bouchet, P. and S. Gofas. (2014)''Polymesoda'' Rafinesque, 1820.Accessed through: World Register of Marine Species. They were previously in the family Corbiculidae The Corbiculidae ar ...
there are also marine dinoflagellates and the ostracode Hemicyprideis. Within the basal shell layer traces of an eroded soil horizon (paleosoil) were found. The hiatus underneath is estimated to have lasted 350.000 years. The following mammal taxa were found in the Lower Hamstead Member: '' Amphidozotherium cayluxi'', '' Amphiperaterium exile'', '' Anoplotherium latipes'', '' Bransatoglis planus'', '' Butselia biveri'', '' Cryptopithecus'', '' Eotalpa anglica'', '' Glamys fordi'', '' Palaeotherium curtum'', '' Palaeotherium muehlbergi'', '' Paradoxonycteris tobieni'', '' Pseudoltinomys cuvieri'', '' Ronzotherium sp.'', '' Stehlinia minor'', '' Suevosciurus ehingensis'', '' Suevosciurus fraasi'', '' Theridomys bonduelli'' and '' Xiphodon gracilis''. Amongst plants
conifers Conifers are a group of cone-bearing seed plants, a subset of gymnosperms. Scientifically, they make up the division Pinophyta (), also known as Coniferophyta () or Coniferae. The division contains a single extant class, Pinopsida. All extan ...
start appearing, an example being '' Quasisequoia couttsiae'' and the
pollen Pollen is a powdery substance produced by seed plants. It consists of pollen grains (highly reduced microgametophytes), which produce male gametes (sperm cells). Pollen grains have a hard coat made of sporopollenin that protects the gametophyt ...
'' Inaperturopollenites magnus''.


Upper Hamstead Member

The Upper Hamstead Member can reach a thickness of 60 meters. It starts with a 3-meter thick interlayering of greenish-greyish clay and silt bearing decalcified Polymesoda shells. Roughly 10 metres above the base follows the ''Eomys bed'' and immediately above it the ''White Band'' also containing Polymesoda shells. After the ''Crocodile bed'' the member ends with 8 meters of turquoise, plastic clays with orange-red freckles. Intercalated are occasional brown, slickensided, laminated clays and some shell horizons. Worth mentioning is also the ''White lily bed'' in the upper third of the Upper Hamstead Member. Mammal remains were also found in the Upper Hamstead Member. They belong to the following species: '' Amphicynodon sp.'', '' Amphiperatherium exile'', '' Amphiperaterium minutum'', ''
Asteneofiber ''Propalaeocastor'' is a poorly known extinct genus of beavers (family Castoridae) from the early Oligocene of Europe and Asia. Recently described material of a new species of ''Propalaeocastor'', ''P. irtyshensis'', indicates the genus is pr ...
'', '' Atavocricetodon atavus'', '' Bothriodon velaunus'', '' Butseloglis micio'', '' Cryptopithecus'', '' Elomeryx porcinus'', ''
Entelodon magnus ''Entelodon'' (meaning "complete teeth", from Ancient Greek ''entelēs'' "complete" and ''odōn'' "tooth", referring to its "complete" eutherian dentition), is an extinct genus of entelodont artiodactyl endemic to Eurasia. Fossils of species ar ...
'', '' Eomys'', '' Glamys fordi'', '' Hyaenodon dubius'', '' Isoptychus margaritae'', '' Leptadapis sp.'', '' Myxomygale antiqua'', '' Paradoxonycteris tobieni'', '' Pecora'', '' Peratherium perriense'', '' Pseudoltinomys gaillardi'', '' Ronzotherium romani'', '' Stehlinia gracilis'', '' Tapirulus hyracinus'' and '' Tetracus''. Chronologically the Hamstead Member starts at the Priabonian/ Rupelian boundary and reaches into the upper Rupelian. It comprises the chrons C 13n and the lower part of C 12r. In absolute age it covers the time span 33.75 to 32.5 million years BP.


Cranmore Member

The Cranmore Member on top of the Bouldnor Formation is merely 5 to 9 meters thick and consists mainly of blueish-greenish clays. It starts off as a brackish facies (''Cerithium beds'' with Cerithium) but changes to marine in the ''Corbula beds'' (with '' Corbula pisum'' and '' Corbula vectensis''). The marine character is also underlined by the gastropods '' Hydrobia sp.'', '' Pusillina turbinata'', '' Sandbergeria vectiana'', '' Strebloceras cornuides'', '' Syrnola sp.'' and '' Teinostoma decussatum''. Also present are '' Viviparus lentus'' shells. The Cranmore Member belongs biostratigraphically to the calcareous nannofossil biozone NP23. The sedimentation stopped at the end of the member and the sea withdrew completely from the Hampshire Basin.


Sequence stratigraphy

The Bouldnor-Formation consists of two second-order sequences, the
sequence boundary In mathematics, a sequence is an enumerated collection of objects in which repetitions are allowed and order matters. Like a set, it contains members (also called ''elements'', or ''terms''). The number of elements (possibly infinite) is called t ...
(SB) being situated right underneath the ''Nematura bed''. The first sequence already started at the base of the Bembridge Limestone Formation. The marine intervals within the Bouldnor Formation are interpreted as sea level highstands. The ''log bed'' was formed during retreating sea levels and are part of a
falling stage systems tract Falling or fallin' may refer to: *Falling (physics), movement due to gravity *Falling (accident) *Falling (execution) *Falling (sensation) People *Christine Falling (born 1963), American serial killer who murdered six children Books *Falling ...
(FSST). It is plausible that this fall in sea level correlates with the onset of glaciation in Antarctica at the beginning of the Oligocene. The Eocene/Oligocene boundary most likely is situated below the sequence boundary in the Lower Hamstead Member or high in the upper Bembridge Marls Member. Remark: This interpretation proposed by Hooker et al. (2009) is not accepted by all geologists. Gale et al. (2006) for instance place the sequence boundary much lower in the Bembridge Limestone Formation and also further subdivide the lower sequence into three sequences.Gale, A.S. et al. (2006). Correlation of Eocene–Oligocene marine and continental records: orbital cyclicity, magnetostratigraphy and sequence stratigraphy of the Solent Group, Isle of Wight, UK. Journal of the Geological Society. London, 163, pp. 401–415


Grande Coupure

The Grande Coupure within the Bouldnor Formation can be characterized by the enclosed biota as follows: In the Upper Hamstead Member 16 new taxa appear for the first time and 11 disappear. Within the pre-Grand Coupure Lower Hamstead Member only 5 new appearances were registered, mainly European
rodents Rodents (from Latin , 'to gnaw') are mammals of the order Rodentia (), which are characterized by a single pair of continuously growing incisors in each of the upper and lower jaws. About 40% of all mammal species are rodents. They are nat ...
like Butselia. Amongst the 16 newcomers at the Grande Coupure are 10 immigrant species from Asia. Noticeable is also a concurrent general reduction in diversity. Within the Bembridge Limestone Formation 47 taxa were present, whereas within the Upper Hamstead Member the number of species had reduced to 28. One should notice though that the minimum in diversity with 20 taxa was already reached within the Lower Hamstead Member. This argues for a much more drawn out process in the reduction of species setting in already before the Grande Coupure. The Grande Coupure itself is distinguished by the fairly rapid replacement of endemic species with immigrants from Asia.


See also


References

{{reflist


Bibliography

* Hooker, J.J. The Grande Coupure in the Hampshire Basin, UK: taxonomy and stratigraphy of the mammals on either side of this major Paleogene faunal turnover. Micropalaeontology, Sedimentary Environments and Stratigraphy. Edited by Wittaker, J.E. & Hart, M.B. * Hooker, J.J. et al.(2009). Refined correlation of the UK Late Eocene-Early Oligocene Solent Group and timing of its climate history. The Geological Society of America Special Paper 452. The late Eocene Earth: hothouse, icehouse and impacts. Edited by Christian Koeberl & Alessandro Montanari.


External links


Contribution by A.S. Gale et al.
Stratigraphy of the United Kingdom Geologic formations of England Eocene Series of Europe Oligocene Series of Europe Priabonian Stage Rupelian Stage Shale formations Paleontology in England Geology of the Isle of Wight Geology of Hampshire