Crackington Haven sole structures 2
Crackington Haven and Cambeak
Crackington Haven from Pencannow Cliff
Little Barton Strand
Little Barton Strand westwards
The end of the Cleave valley
The Cleave valley
Castle Point and Orchard Strand
Little Barton Strand sole structures
Purple on gold
Clearing mist over Burbage Edge
Fair weather cumulus over Morwenstow
Vertical bedding slab at Northcott Mouth, Cornwall…
Plunging chevron folds at Northcott Mouth
Maer Down cliff convergence 1
Maer Down cliff convergence 2
Smooth Rock convergence 1
Smooth Rock convergence 2
Maer Cliff syncline 1
Maer Cliff syncline 2
Maer Cliff incompetent deformation
Maer Cliff incompetent deformation - detail
Northcott Mouth anticline 1
Crackington Haven recumbent folds interpretation
Crackington Haven recumbent folds
Pencannow Point cliff at Crackington Haven
Crackington Haven low tide
Pentargon panorama
On the edge - Pentargon waterfall
Pentargon valley and waterfall
Pentargon 2
Pentargon blue
Buckator cliffs, north Cornwall
Evening sky at Crackington Haven
The Lone Photographer
Cambeak late afternoon glow
The Strangles beach
Fault zone detail at The Strangles
Fault zone at The Strangles
Fold axial planar cleavage
Recumbent fold 3 at The Strangles
The Strangles recumbent fold 2
The Strangles recumbent fold couplet
Samphire Rock and Northern Door
The Strangles cliff
1/80 • f/6.3 • 30.0 mm • ISO 100 •
Location
Lat, Lng:
You can copy the above to your favourite mapping app.
Address: unknown
You can copy the above to your favourite mapping app.
Address: unknown
See also...
Keywords
Authorizations, license
-
Visible by: Everyone -
All rights reserved
-
178 visits
Crackington Haven sole structures 1


These elongated ridges are seen on the inverted bedding surface of a turbidite sandstone bed (Crackington Formation, upper Carboniferous) on the south side of Crackington Haven, north Cornwall. The scale can be deduced from the limpets - the largest is about 4 cm across.
The ridges are casts of sandstone infill into what was originally a hollow groove in the underlying sediment. The grooves were formed at the time of sediment deposition by fast-flowing water making small erosion scours around irregularities on the Carboniferous sea bed. Sometimes the current flow was sufficiently powerful to drag along pebbles and small boulders, which created long linear grooves.
Here, the rocks have been turned almost completely upside-down by intense folding at the end of the Carboniferous, so the grooves now appear as ridges. These sedimentary structures are generally known as 'sole structures' and are valuable as 'way-up' indicators - we can tell whether the rocks are the right way up or have been inverted, as is the case here.
Also in this example, the scours are asymmetrical - deeper at the upstream end (lower right) and shallowing off at the downstream end (upper left), so they also provide evidence for the water current direction at the time of deposition. So in this case, the water flowed from lower right to upper left. But the rocks have been inverted by folding, so.....
Here, the rocks are dipping (sloping) to the north (right) at about 30°, having been completely overturned by the folding. To restore this slab into its pre-folding position we need to imagine it 'flipped over', by rotating it through approx. 150° in a clockwise sense, like closing the left-hand side of an open book.
Once we do this, the sole structure ridges on the upper surface of the slab become protrusions on the underside of the slab, with the asymmetric deeper upstream side to the left (south) and the shallower downstream side to the right (north). Therefore, the original current direction which transported the sediment of the Crackington Formation was from south to north: the source of the sediment lay to the south, and was transported northwards by the water currents.
NB: The information board by the public toilets at Crackington Haven is excellent, except for where it states that the Crackington Formation sediment derivation was from the north. Sorry, but they've got that bit wrong! The evidence is there on the beach for all to see.
The ridges are casts of sandstone infill into what was originally a hollow groove in the underlying sediment. The grooves were formed at the time of sediment deposition by fast-flowing water making small erosion scours around irregularities on the Carboniferous sea bed. Sometimes the current flow was sufficiently powerful to drag along pebbles and small boulders, which created long linear grooves.
Here, the rocks have been turned almost completely upside-down by intense folding at the end of the Carboniferous, so the grooves now appear as ridges. These sedimentary structures are generally known as 'sole structures' and are valuable as 'way-up' indicators - we can tell whether the rocks are the right way up or have been inverted, as is the case here.
Also in this example, the scours are asymmetrical - deeper at the upstream end (lower right) and shallowing off at the downstream end (upper left), so they also provide evidence for the water current direction at the time of deposition. So in this case, the water flowed from lower right to upper left. But the rocks have been inverted by folding, so.....
Here, the rocks are dipping (sloping) to the north (right) at about 30°, having been completely overturned by the folding. To restore this slab into its pre-folding position we need to imagine it 'flipped over', by rotating it through approx. 150° in a clockwise sense, like closing the left-hand side of an open book.
Once we do this, the sole structure ridges on the upper surface of the slab become protrusions on the underside of the slab, with the asymmetric deeper upstream side to the left (south) and the shallower downstream side to the right (north). Therefore, the original current direction which transported the sediment of the Crackington Formation was from south to north: the source of the sediment lay to the south, and was transported northwards by the water currents.
NB: The information board by the public toilets at Crackington Haven is excellent, except for where it states that the Crackington Formation sediment derivation was from the north. Sorry, but they've got that bit wrong! The evidence is there on the beach for all to see.
- Keyboard shortcuts:
Jump to top
RSS feed- Latest comments - Subscribe to the comment feeds of this photo
- ipernity © 2007-2025
- Help & Contact
|
Club news
|
About ipernity
|
History |
ipernity Club & Prices |
Guide of good conduct
Donate | Group guidelines | Privacy policy | Terms of use | Statutes | In memoria -
Facebook
Twitter
Sign-in to write a comment.