- Carboniferous limestone
Carboniferous Limestone is a type of
limestone rock, which was laid down inGreat Britain andIreland in theDinantian stage of theCarboniferous period. It was formed between 363 and 325 million years ago. It is one of the three most common types of limestone found in Britain, along withchalk and Jurassiclimestone .Outcrops
The
Mendip hills consist of Carboniferous limestone, showing notable geomorphological features, includingCheddar Gorge and theAvon Gorge nearBristol . Outcrops occur around the edge of the coalfields in south and northWales , whereEglwyseg Escarpment , near Llangollen andGreat Ormes Head are prominent features. There are a few outcrops inShropshire such as Titterstone Clee hill and Little Wenlock. It covers much of the area of theDerbyshire Peak District . However, the main outcrop in terms of area is in thePennines and surrounding theLake District .Characteristics
Carboniferous limestone is a sedimentary rock made of Calcium carbonate. It is generally light-grey in colour, and is hard. It was formed in warm, shallow tropical seas teeming with life. The rock is made up of the shells and hard parts of millions of sea creatures, some up to 30 cm in length, encased in carbonate mud. Fossil corals,
brachiopod s andcrinoids are very much in evidence as components of Carboniferous limestone; indeed the rock is full of fossils.Carboniferous limestone has horizontal layers (beds) with bedding planes, and vertical joints. These joints are weaknesses in the rock, which are exploited by agents of both
denudation andweathering . They also lead to the most important characteristic of Carboniferous limestone - its permeability. Water seeps through the joints in the limestone. This creates a landscape that lackssurface drainage but which has all manner of characteristic surface and subsurface features. The Carboniferous Limestone has been folded and faulted by massive Earth movements which can be seen by the fact that the rocks are now above sea-level and no longer horizontal. The rocks generally dip (slope) gently eastwards and, in some places, clear folds in the rock can be seen especially at the Great Orme and Bryn Alyn (Denbighshire).Surface Features
The 'classic limestone walk' is a circular 10 km route from the field centre on the north side of
Malham Tarn to the village of Malham, UK viaWatlowes Valley and back again viaGordale Scar . The walk has an example of nearly every significant surface limestone feature.Small surface depressions called shakeholes, which are 1-3m deep and 3-5m across, form as a result of the subsurface collapse of limestone. Shakeholes are very common throughout the Yorkshire Dales. Larger depressions are called dolines.
Streams flowing from higher impermeable slopes sink into the ground when they reach permeable limestone. During dry spells all water sinks very quickly on reaching the limestone, through
sinkholes . In wetter conditions water flows a greater distance across the limestone as underground channels and chambers fill up. Large sinkholes are called 'swallowholes' or 'potholes'.Gaping Gill , Alum Pot and the Buttertubs are well-known examples.Dry valleys are valleys without streams.
Watlowes Valley is an excellent example. It was formed originally by a subglacial meltwater stream which existed during the last majorIce Age . After the ice retreated, the valley was further developed by a meltwater stream flowing across the limestone while it was frozen solid.Watlowes Valley is a particularly good example of a dry valley because it has a textbook profile - the south-facing side is less steep than the north-facing side. This results from the weathering and mass movement processes that have operated in the post-glacial period.A
limestone pavement is an area of almost bare, flat rock and is arguably the most fascinating feature of any area of carboniferous limestone. They develop after the rock has been exposed by the scouring action of anice sheet orglacier . Existing joints are subsequently exploited by the action of chemical weatheringcarbonation to form deepgrykes and rounded blocks calledclints . Grykes have a habitat of their own, which encourages the growth of shade-loving ferns such ashart's tongue anddog's mercury . During the last Ice Age,Malham Cove - the most spectacular feature in the Yorkshire Dales - was a waterfall comparable in size to theHorseshoe Falls of Niagara. At the end of the Ice Age the limestone, which had been frozen solid, once again became permeable, allowing the water to disappear through its joints. Now Malham Cove is a high cliff (83m high) - it is completely dry, and a great attraction to rock climbers.A
gorge is a steep-sidedvalley , generally formed in a limestone area as the result of the collapse of a roof above a cave system.Gordale Scar is an excellent example.Sub-Surface Features
The most common examples of subsurface features in a limestone landscape are caves. In the
Yorkshire Dales , there are numerous caves, three of which -Ingleborough Caves ,White Scar Caves andStump Cross Caverns - are now show caves for the public.The caves themselves and their associated formations vary greatly in size, but they all depend on the process of
carbonation for their creation. Carbonation is a reversible process: it results in the redeposition of calcite, and the development ofstalagmite s,stalactites ,straw stalactites ,helictites ,pillars andflowstone . the rate of growth of these formations is about 1cm per 200 years - it is therefore an extremely slow process. Some stalactites may be millions of years old.Economics
Carbonifereous limestone has not been much used as a building stone, because it is brittle, but it is extensively quarried for other purposes:
* It is crushed for
roadstone and aggregate wherever it outcrops, particularly in the Mendips and north Wales.
* It is burned for lime in many places. In certain places (e.g. Tunstead in the Peak District, andHorton in Ribblesdale in the Pennines), it is sufficiently pure for production of chemical-grade lime.
* It is used in cement manufacture at plants in England (4), Wales (2), Scotland (1) and Ireland (4).
* In ground form, it is used for power industryflue gas desulfurization .
* In many places it is , and has yieldedlead (in the Peak District andWeardale , andcopper (in North Wales, where importantBronze Age mines are to be found).
* It was important in the earlyIndustrial Revolution when, following the inventions ofAbraham Darby , it was used in combination with nearbycoal andironstone from theCoal Measures in theiron industry.ee also
*
List of types of limestone
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