Girish Mahajan (Editor)

Llewelyn Volcanic Group

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Type
  
Group

Thickness
  
approx 1400m

Named for
  
Carnedd Llewelyn

Underlies
  
Cwm Eigiau Formation

Primary
  
ash flow tuffs

Overlies
  
Nant Ffrancon Formation

Llewelyn Volcanic Group httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Sub-units
  
Capel Curig Volcanic Formation, Foel Fras Volcanic Formation, Conwy Rhyolite Volcanic Formation, Foel Grach Basalt Formation, Braich Tu Du Volcanic Formation

Other
  
rhyolites, mudstones, siltstones, sandstones, breccias etc

The Llewelyn Volcanic Group is an Ordovician lithostratigraphic group (a sequence of rock strata) in Snowdonia, north-west Wales. The name is derived from Carnedd Llewelyn, the highest peak in the Carneddau range where it outcrops.

Contents

Outcrops

The rocks occur across the Snowdon massif and the Carneddau and within the Capel Curig Anticline.

Lithology and stratigraphy

The Group comprises around 1400m thickness of ash flow tuffs, flow-banded rhyolites and breccias with a variety of volcaniclastic sediments erupted or sedimented during the Caradocian epoch of the Ordovician period. The Group comprises (in descending order, i.e. oldest last):

  • Capel Curig Volcanic Formation
  • Foel Fras Volcanic Formation
  • Conwy Rhyolite Volcanic Formation
  • It also includes the Foel Grach Basalt Formation and the Braich Tu Du Volcanic Formation.

    References

    Llewelyn Volcanic Group Wikipedia