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Ordovician Period

(495 - 443 million years ago)

The oldest rocks to be found in the Geopark belong to the period which geologists know as the Ordovician.  This period was named by the distinguished Victorian geologist, Charles Lapworth after the Welsh tribe, the Ordovices that inhabited much of central and north Wales.

this section of the site is still under development - a map of Ordovician rocks in the Geopark will appear here

The rocks comprise a complex mix of mudstones, limestones and sandstones.  The youngest Ordovician rocks suggest a worldwide fall in sea-level as a major ice age set in.  Geologists recognise six ‘formations’ within the late Ordovician rock sequence.

 

Rock layer/s (formations)

Description

Approximate thickness

Cwmcringlyn (highest/youngest)

Sandstones with some mudstones

Up to 50m

Ciliau

Silty mudstones with lime-rich siltstone and thin sandstones

Up to 250m

Yr Allt

Mudstones and sandstones

Up to 300m

Cribarth

Sandy mudstones and muddy sandstones

Up to 400m

Tridwr

Mudstones with thin sandstones

Up to 1150m

Nantmel Mudstones

(lowest/oldest)

Mudstones with thin sandstones

Up to 700m

 Visit the Ordovician Timechart

 this section of the site is still under development - a photo of Ordovician rocks will appear here

 

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