Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-dk4vv Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-26T06:50:05.077Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The Millstone Grit of Gower

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 May 2009

Emily Dix
Affiliation:
Bedford College, London.

Extract

THE Millstone Grit described in this paper forms a belt of country about a mile wide, stretching from west-north-west to east-south-east across the north of the Gower Peninsula. Reference is also made to small areas of Millstone Grit preserved in synclines at Oxwich and Porteynon on the south coast of Gower. These areas form the most important outcrops of this formation on the south of the South Wales Coalfield. Further east the Millstone Grit is thinner and it is not exposed for some miles to the east of Swansea Bay, as it is concealed by Mesozoic rocks.

Type
Original Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1931

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

REFERENCES TO LITERATURE

Memories of the Geological Survey. “The Geology of the South Wales Coalfield,” part i, “The Country around Newport,” ed. 2, 1909; part ii, “ The Country around Abergavenny,” ed. 2, 1927; part v, “The Country around Merthyr Tydfil,” 1904; part vii, “The Country around Ammanford,” 1907; part viii, “The Country around Swansea,” 1907; part ix, “West Gower and the Country around Pembrey,”1907; part xi, “The Country around Haverfordwest,” 1914.Google Scholar
Bisat, W. S., 1923. “Gastrioceras cancellatum (sp. nov.) at Meanwood, Leeds,” Trans. Leeds Geol. Assoc., part xix (1920–3).Google Scholar
Bisat, W. S., 1924. “The Carboniferous Goniatites of the North of England and their zones,” Proc. Yorks. Geol. Soc., xx, part i, 40.Google Scholar
Bisat, W. S., 1927. “The Carboniferous Goniatite Zones of England and their Continental Equivalents,” Congrès de Strat. Carb., Heerlen., 117.Google Scholar
Crookall, R. 1925. “On the Fossil Flora of the Bristol and Somerset Coalfield,” Geol. Mag., LXII, 145 and 385.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Crookall, R. 1931. “A Critical Revision of Kidston's Coal Measure Floras,” Proc. Roy. Phys. Soc., xxii, part 1.Google Scholar
Davies, J. H. and Trueman, A. E. 1927. “A Revision of the Non-Marine Lamellibranchs of the Coal Measures, etc.”, Quart. Journ. Geol. Soc., lxxxiii, 210.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dix, E., and Trueman, A. E. 1924. “The Correlation of the Coal Measures in the Western Portion of the South Wales Coalfield, part 2, The Coal Measures of North Gower,” Proc. South Wales Inst. Eng., xl, 353.Google Scholar
Dix, E., Pringle, J., and Trueman, A. E. 1930. “The Significance of the Lanarkian Series,” The Naturalist, 321.Google Scholar
Dixey, F., and Sibly, T.F., 1917. “The Carboniferous Limestone Series on the South-eastern Margin of the South Wales Coalfield,” Quart. Journ. Geol. Soc., lxvii, 111.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dixon, E. E. L., 1921. “The Unconformity between the Millstone Grit and Carboniferous Limestone at Ifton, Mon,” Geol. Mag., LVIII, 157.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dixon, E. E. L., and Pringle, J., 1927. “The Penlan Quartzite,” Summary of Progress Geol. Surv. for 1926, 123.Google Scholar
Dixon, E. E. L., and Vaughan, A., 1911. “The Carboniferous Succession in Gower (Glamorganshire), with Notes on its Fauna and Conditions of Deposition,” Quart. Journ. Geol. Soc., lxvii, 477.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Evans, D. G., and Jones, R. O., 1929. “Notes on the Millstone Grit of the North Crop of the South Wales Coalfield,” Geol. Mao., LXVII, 164.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
George, T. N., 1927. “The Carboniferous Limestone (Avonian) Succession of a Portion of the North Crop of the South Wales Coalfield,” Quart. Journ. Geol. Soc., lxxxiii, 38.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Goode, R. H., 1913. “On the Fossil Flora of the Pembrokeshire Portion of the South Wales Coalfield,” Quart. Journ. Geol. Soc., lxix, 252.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jackson, J. W., 1927. “New Carboniferous Lamellibranchs and Notes on other Forms,” Proc. Manch. Lit, and Phil. Soc., lxxi, 1926–7.Google Scholar
Jackson, J. W., 1925. “The Relation of the Edale Shales to the Carboniferous Limestone in North Derbyshire,” Geol. Mag., LXII, 267.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jackson, J. W. 1926. “The Goniatite Zones below the Kinderscout Grit in North Derbyshire,” The Naturalist, 205.Google Scholar
Jones, O. T., 1925. “Correspondence,” Geol. Mag., LXII, 558.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kitchin, F. L., 1926. In Summary of Progress Geological Survey for 1925, 132.Google Scholar
Robertson, T., and George, T. N., 1929. “The Carboniferous Limestone of the North Crop of the South Wales Coalfield,” Proc. Geol. Assoc., xl.Google Scholar