- Bradford Clay
Bradford Clay in
geology , is a thin, rather inconstant bed ofclay ormarl situated inEngland at the base of the Forest Marble, the two together constituting the Bradfordian group in theBathonian series ofJurassic rocks. The term "Bradford Clay" appears to have been first used by J. de. C. Sowerby in 1823 as an alternative for W. Smith's, "Clay on Upper Oolite". The clay came into notice late in the 18th century on account of the local abundance of the crinoid Apiocrinus Parkinsoni. It takes its name fromBradford-on-Avon inWiltshire , whence it is traceable southward to theDorset coast and northward towardsCirencester . It may be regarded as a local phase of the basement beds of the Forest Marble, from which it cannot be separated upon eitherstratigraphical orpaleontological grounds. It is seldom more than 10 feet thick, and it contains, as a rule, a few irregular layers oflimestone andcalcareous sandstone . The lowest layer is often highlyfossil iferous; some of the common forms being Arca minuta, Ostrea gregaria, Waldheimia digona, Terebratula coarctata and Cidaris bradfordensis.
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