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Gwna Group

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Type
  
Group

Underlies
  
Fydlyn Group

Thickness
  
several hundred metres

Unit of
  
Monian Supergroup

Overlies
  
Church Bay Tuffs

Primary
  
mélange

Gwna Group httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

The Gwna Group is a late Precambrian (Ediacaran) / Cambrian lithostratigraphic group (a sequence of rock strata) in northwest Wales. The name is derived from the Afon Gwna, a river near Bodorgan on Anglesey where the strata are exposed. This rock sequence is also commonly referred to as the Gwna Mélange.

Contents

Outcrops

These rocks are exposed across various parts of Anglesey and along the northern coast of Llŷn and at Bardsey Island The extensive coastal cliffs at each of these locations affords excellent exposure.

Lithology and stratigraphy

The Group is considered to represent the result of an olistostrome, a giant underwater gravity slide, which occurred probably as a result of tectonic activity at some time after 614 million years ago. It includes clasts, at all sizes from millimetres up to a kilometre or more, of a diverse range of both sedimentary and igneous rocks. Since deposition the group as a whole has been subject to low grade metamorphism.

References

Gwna Group Wikipedia