Online Encyclopedia

LUDLOW GROUP, or LUDLOVIAN

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V17, Page 113 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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LUDLOW
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GROUP, or LUDLOVIAN
  , in geology, the uppermost subdivision of the
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Silurian rocks in
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Great Britain . This
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group contains the following formations in descending order: Tilestones, Downton Castle sandstones (90 ft.),
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Ledbury shales (270 ft.), Upper Ludlow rocks (140 ft.), Aymestry
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limestone (up to 40 ft.),
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Lower Ludlow rocks (350 to 780 ft.) . The Ludlow group is essentially shaly in character, except towards the top, where the beds become more sandy and pass gradually into the
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base of the Old Red
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Sandstone . The Aymestry limestone, which is irregular in thickness, is sometimes absent, and where the underlying
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Wenlock limestones are absent the shales of the Ludlow group graduate, downwards into the Wenlock shales . The group is typically
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developed between Ludlow and Aymestry, and it occurs also in the detached Silurian areas between Dudley and the mouth of the Severn . The Lower Ludlow rocks are mainly grey, greenish and brown mudstones and sandy and calcareous shales . They contain an abundance of fossils . The series has been zoned by means of the
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graptolites by E . M . R . Wood; the following in ascending order, are the zonal forms: Monograptus vulgaris, M . Nilssoni, M. scanicus, M. tumescens and M. leintwardinensis .

Cyathaspis ludensis, the earliest

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British vertebrate fossil, was found in these rocks at Leintwardine in Shropshire, a noted fossil locality .
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Trilobites are numerous (Phacops caudatus, Lichas anglicus, Homolonotus delphinocephalus, Calymene Blumenbachii) ; brachiopods (Leptaena rhomboidalis, Rhynchonella Wilsoni, Atrypa reticularis), pelecypods (Cardiola interrupts, Ctenodonta sulcata), and gasteropods and cephalopods (many
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species of Orthoceras and also Gomphoceras, Trochoceras) are well represented . Other fossils are Ceratiocaris, Pterygotus, Protaster, Palaeocoma and Palaeodiscus . The Upper Ludlow rocks are mainly soft mudstones and shales with some harder sandy beds capable of being worked as
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building-stones . These sandy beds are often found covered with ripple-marks and annelid tracks; one of the uppermost sandy layers is known as the " Fucoid bed " from the abundance of the seaweed-like impressions it bears . At the top of this sub-group, near Ludlow, a brown layer occurs, from a quarter of an inch to 4 in. in thickness, full of the fragmentary remains of fish associated with those of Pterygotus and
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mollusca . This layer, known as the " Ludlow Bone bed," has been traced over a very large
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area (see BONE BED) . The
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common fossils include
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plants (Actinophyllum, Chondrites), ostracods, phyllocarids, eurypterids, trilobites (less common than in the older groups), numerous brachiopods (Lingula minima, Chonetes striatella), gasteropods, pelecypods and cephalopods (Orthoceras bullatum) . Fish include Cephalaspis, Cyathaspis, Auchenaspis . The Tilestones, Downton Castle Sandstone and Ledbury shales are occasionally grouped together under the
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term Downtonian . They are in reality passage beds between the Silurian and Old Red Sandstone, and were originally placed in the latter
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system by
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Sir R . I .

Murchison . They are mostly grey, yellow or red micaceous, shaly sandstones . Lingula cornea, Platyschisma helicites and numerous phyllocarids and ostracods occur among the fossils . In Denbighshire and Merionethshire the upper portion of the Denbighshire Grits belongs to this horizon: viz. those from below upwards, the Nantglyn Flags, the Upper Grit beds, the Monograptus leintwardinensis beds and the Dinas
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Bran beds . In the Silurian area of the Lake
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district the Coldwell beds, forming the upper
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part of the Coniston Flags, are the equivalents of the Lower Ludlow; they are succeeded by the Coniston Grits (4000 ft.), the Bannisdale Slates (5200 ft.) and the Kirkby
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Moor Flags (2000 ft.) . In the Silurian areas of
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southern Scotland, the Ludlow rocks are represented in the Kirkcudbright
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Shore and Riccarton district by the Raeberry Castle beds and Balmae Grits (500-750 ft.) . In the
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northern belt—Lanarkshire and the Pentland Hills—the lower portion (or Ludlovian) consists of mudstones, flaggy shales and greywackes; but the upper (or Downtonian) part is made up principally of thick red and yellow sandstones and conglomerates with green mudstones . The Ludlow rocks of Ireland include the " Salrock beds " of County
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Galway and the " Croagmarhin beds " of
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Dingle promontory . See SILURIAN, and, for
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recent papers, the Q.J . Geol .
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Soc . (
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London) and
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Geological Literature (Geol .

Soc., London)

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annual .

End of Article: LUDLOW GROUP, or LUDLOVIAN
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