|
SEAHOUSES ROCK Quite apart from the kind of rock that has "Seahouses" running right through it, there are lots of rocks under and around the village and beaches of Seahouses. There's a lot to see once you start exploring the cliffs and tidal rocks, especially just south of the harbour and village.
What's pretty obvious is that there's vegetation growing in soil up at the top. Below that there are layers of rocks in the little cliff, with some loose rocks lying around on the beach too. But the rocks don't all look the same. THE DIFFERENT KINDS OF SEAHOUSES ROCKS Perhaps the most significant rock in the area is "limestone".
Any rock that seems to be in more or less regular blocks is likely to be limestone. All limestones were formed millions of years ago from the chalky remains of microscopic organisms living in warm tropical seas. Over immense periods of time the soft ooze was compressed and hardened into a fairly hard rock. Limestone has been very important in the history of Seahouses, having been the mineral used to produce quicklime in the kilns, as explained on the display boards at the harbourside.
Whereas limestone tends to crack and break into blocks, sandstone wears away without cracking, often leaving odd shapes. Any dry rock around Seahouses with particles that glisten in the sunlight is sure to be a sandstone. It's a fairly soft rock as rocks go, so it's a prime target for ardent lovers! On the other hand, some exposed sandstones still show ripple marks or layering from when they were first laid down.
This nearly always happened in relatively quiet water environments, so any layering was preserved in the resulting "mudstone" or "clay rock" (of very fine particles) and "siltstone" (of slightly larger water-carried particles): you can be excused if you call them all "shales" instead. Almost like tree-rings, the layers might have differed from year to year or century to century: we see the result as contrasting colours, often exposed as remarkably artistic patterns.
"Brachiopods" were (and still are) sea creatures equipped with top and bottom shells hinged at the 'back', so to speak. They flourished throughout most geological times: scientists have catalogued some twelve thousand different species - but we don't know what kind ours were!
In fact it was local coal that was used in the limekilns, but it was a limited resource so no significant mining has taken place since those days. Seahouses coal occurs mainly in soft, thin layers among the mudstones, having been formed from the remains of tropical forests.
His major finding, published in 1884, was that the line of the present-day Annstead Burn marked the position of a really massive fault line, the Annstead Fault, running east-west: Beadnell layers finished up something like 950 or 1,150 feet higher than the corresponding Seahouses deposits - as shown by the dotted line. Otherwise undisturbed, subsequent relentless erosion levelled things off to the 'edgy' contours visible today. OK, so that's the ancient history. After a very long gap in the geological record, Seahouses bears evidence of what happened in the last ¼-million years. Several major ice ages followed one another. When snow accumulates over prolonged periods the sheer weight compresses all except the top surface into more or less solid ice. But that huge mass, up to 1 km thick at times, could grind its way slowly down-hill. In the process it scraped off whatever got in its way, dumping all of it only when it eventually melted during a subsequent warmer "interglacial" period. Anything removable near here finished up in the area now forming the North Sea. But in return the final glacier flowing down south-eastwards brought us some Cumbrian and Scottish material!
And that's what all the brown stuff is. It consists of the fine clay and coarser particles that the glacier ground off the immoveable rocks, plus larger particles, stones and anything up to boulders carried down within the mass of ice. Its origin and nature give it two common names: "glacial till" and "boulder clay". Any boulder carried in this way, if it's clearly not native to where it finishes up, is called an "erratic". CHANGES TO SEAHOUSES ROCKS It would be wrong to imagine that history happened and then stopped. Nothing is permanent. The forces of nature continue their inexorable recycling of materials on a timescale of mind-numbing proportions. But the effects can be seen between one visit and the next. Perhaps most obvious is the movement of sand.
Winds cause waves: waves can agitate and carry sand. But this should not be thought of as a simple movement from A to B. Sand is carried only when the water is in motion, acting like a very dilute but effective grinding paste on the surface of whatever can't get out of its way. Some small indication of the forces at work is shown by the way the measurable levels of sand change as hundreds of tonnes are moved on-shore and out again later in this small cove. During incoming and outgoing tides pebbles are constantly rolled over and around too, grinding against each other, rounding off any corners, and liberating fresh particles to add to the grinding paste.
The effect on larger rocks is seen here. Characteristically square-edged blocks of limestone have finally come away from the cliff in the left-hand picture. After exposure to countless tides and innumerable wave actions their predecessors, pictured right, have had their corners and edges worn away: abrasion rules! (That's the same rock arrowed in each picture.)
So under the eternal bombardment of gritty waves those patches are the first to be eroded away.
A cave may form for a while, as has happened - or is happening (present tense) - just round the corner from Snook Point. But sooner or later something gives way and the upper layers break up and collapse onto the beach. Such major events are very rare, but -
Heavy rain, or gentle rain over a long time, washes the finer clay and silt particles away from the boulder clay where it is exposed above our beaches: the inevitable result is that from time to time a sizeable boulder loses its support and tumbles down, health and safety notwithstanding. The centre example shows the release of a block of limestone and some glacial till when the soil and vegetation around it lost stability. Our biggest recent (2009) example concerned many tonnes of limestone, other rocks and boulder clay collapsing onto Braidcarr beach, just south of the harbour. Whereas the two left-hand examples were brought about by rainwater, alternating freeze and thaw were almost certainly responsible for the big one on the right.
But most 'delamination' is brought about by the sea, at any temperature. You may find what looks like a sore place where there is a gap in the colouring brought about by the life forms living on the normal surface of the rock. But occasionally it is possible to spot a biscuit-like item freshly released from its millions-of-years siesta: there may be adjoining flakes that can be lifted off with the fingers.
In the nature of the case, there must be other coal seams, similar to the ones we can examine in the cliffs, lower down the rock formation out at sea. The churning action of currents, tides and waves combine to ensure that any material coming away is soon reduced to what is virtually coal sand: we find minor patches of it on beaches both north and south of Seahouses from time to time. It probably continues to be worn away until it becomes invisible, never spoiling our 'golden sands'. It should be realised that the coal sand is noticeable only because it's black: all the other rocks of the shore are constantly being reduced to sand too.
Some nice neat holes were left to posterity by explorers of that earlier age. Exact details are uncertain but local historian Katrina Porteous has found references to drillings in the area dated between 1823 and 1856. She has also discovered that as early as 1899 the official geological map made several references to "Old Shafts" and more specifically "Old Coal Shaft". So if they were "old" then, there is little wonder that they lack the uniformity associated with more modern technology: the diameters of our three are variously 5ft 5", 6ft, and 6ft 6". The note on the "Old Coal Shaft" reported "Bore hereabouts got Eelwell limestone 26' on coal 5" at 9½ fathoms limestone 4'4" at 16 fathoms coal (mostly foul) 4'9" at 24 fathoms". Another site slightly further inland revealed "4' coal (mostly stone) at 9 or 10 fathoms". (1 fathom = 6 feet.) All that work must have constituted a considerable investment at the time.
Just one ancient group of layers were evidently mixed up, almost certainly by primitive mud-living creatures of the time in search of even lowlier life-forms as food. Such stirring is known as bioturbation. It is slightly unfortunate that this only known example near Seahouses is more often than not obscured under a variable depth of mobile sand.
When there are significant movements of the earth's crust the rocks are sometimes able to bend and tip. Beyond those limits the rocks crack and move bodily, suddenly, creating a fault accompanied by an earthquake. The yellow-arrowed layer here was originally all one continuous, more or less level deposit. Viewed from the Coast Path at the top of the cliff that same fault can be seen at a slightly curved step going up the middle of the picture. There are some folk (and their shadows), near-centre right, to help gauge the sizes involved. The early geological map measured it as "Fault 4¾ feet".
To be more specific, limestone slowly dissolves in rainwater, especially acid rainwater. So with plenty of time at its disposal, it can reduce any limestone block to a pretty moth-eaten appearance. Where there's a whole layer the limestone itself may disappear, leaving in situ any other kind of rock that had previously infilled the joints between the blocks, perhaps now sticking up for you to trip over.
Of course, like anything else, rocks weigh a lot less in water than they do in air. So perhaps it's not quite so remarkable that a lift-and-drop action can break them up. (But this kind of demonstration is not one that you'll find every day.)
The very welcome kittiwakes and fulmars who nest on the rock ledges below the golf course produce waste products which coat the rocks and accelerate chemical actions. Ordinary common sea-cliff plants such as the scurvy grass (in flower) and thrift in the centre picture can establish themselves in minute cracks in the rock. Growth and expansion of their roots tends to expand the cracks too. In addition, carbon dioxide produced by their roots makes the moisture more strongly acid than it would otherwise be. The acidifying effect is even more marked with some primitive plants related to mosses which live in damp sheltered hide-away spots: they behave like a sponge holding onto moisture, which becomes even more acid at nights, again due to carbon dioxide. WHAT'S IN AND ON SEAHOUSES ROCKS Let's be clear from the start, there's no Jurassic Park anywhere near Seahouses! But there are several Carboniferous patches. Much the biggest and certainly the richest is the Annstead fossil bed.
As you'll have guessed from this picture, it gets completely covered at high water twice daily, and it's not possible to fix any helpful marker post. The location is well down towards Beadnell, just before reaching the Link House - which you can't see from the beach, though you might see its access path! Anyway, what you'll find if you do find it is this stepped series of limestones of which the top two or three have half a dozen small fossils in almost every square metre from the shore sand to the waterline, wherever it is at the time. Those fossils are almost exclusively crinoids.
Crinoids were simple animals that looked like plants. The body seemed to be a stem: the feeding arms seemed like equal branches normally five in number. You can look up as many details as you want using Google or Wikipedia so there's no need for a longer explanation here. The Seahouses crinoid fossils are in among the carboniferous limestone layers, around three hundred million years old. They mainly consist of sections through the stems or arms, though the left-hand picture is of a small entire piece of stem. Both stem and arms were almost exactly circular in cross-section, and they were all made up of sections (called ossicles) giving a ladder-like appearance lengthways. It was because the ossicles came apart so easily that virtually all crinoid fossils are made up of broken bits rather than whole 'limbs'. (Modern crinoids are feather stars - like starfish.)
On the left is a typical brachiopod shell fossil, of a Spirifer. The centre picture is of an altogether different view, in this case including some of the external spines which are rarely preserved, of a productid brachiopod. But Seahouses can also boast of at least two specimens of the biggest of all the productids, given the impressively appropriate name of Gigantoproductus: it must have been a substantial handful by our standards!
So if you find a rock that looks as if it's been spread with bits of spaghetti or packed with white circles it's very likely to be the fossilised remains of the ancient coral known as Siphonodendron.
The so-called stigmaria shown here are fossil imprints from coal forest trees. The larger specimen on the left appeared after the harbour was dredged. It is likely to have originated as a piece of tree root. The specimen on the right is a small part of what is probably an imprint of the Carboniferous "Scale Tree", Lepidodendron. It was spotted as a pebble on the beach. (Whereas nearly all Seahouses fossils are built-in, diligent search among greyish pebbles can occasionally yield a small fossil, usually a crinoid, that can be taken home.)
It was evidently a carboniferous fossil wood pile! The pieces of material arranged in a triangle are the fossilised remains of trunks of a tree fern (Sigillaria possibly) interleaved with some sediment and then quite thoroughly compacted. It's an unusually clear example.
That was the local name given to these quite noticeable patterns that are relatively common on the surface of Seahouses limestones. Little is known about them for certain, so the scientists call them Zoophycus being uncertain as to their animal or seaweed origin. Best bet is that they were lines left behind by some worm-like creature during its feeding forays.
It is thought that they form by purely chemical processes. Some are relatively large and isolated while others may be dotted across a layer within the sandstone or shale (not limestone): or they may be mixed. It is not unknown for significant nodules to be collected and used locally as an iron ore.
The answer is "piddocks". We're not now talking about ancient creatures: piddocks are at work now, albeit largely under water rather than on the beaches. They are small oyster-like bivalve molluscs with the ability to waggle the toothed edges of their shells so effectively that they can grind out protective recesses in rocks. There are lots of different kinds: you could look up details of the 'common piddock' under Pholas dactylus for example. By the time big pebbles arrive on the dry shore some of the holes may well have been colonised by other organisms, but the right-hand close-up is believed to be a genuine piddock portrait.
Hardly any inland rock is left bare for very long: lichens and mosses and the like soon invade and form a living surface. At the seaside there is the complication of salt spray which severely limits the range of organisms tough enough to thrive. But they do exist, as witnessed by these black and white lichens: they characterise the marine splash zone, and provide reassurance to some visitors perhaps that our black splodges aren't crude oil after all!
Evidently avoiding much in the way of salt spray, this saxifrage keeps a very low profile in one of the regular limestone fissures. (Thought to be purple saxifrage, Saxifraga oppositifolia, the leaves look 'wrong' because the foreshortened stems prevent the normally oblong leaves spreading out.) The ecology of the foreshore can include many types of plants invading from their normal homes inland, if only on a short-term basis. In the other direction, looking down-slope, seaweeds, barnacles, limpets and whole ecosystems are to be found. But they're to be found on a different page: click on the "zonation" link below to explore further. CODA
It may be worth mentioning again the timescales we've been dealing with. Nearly all the Seahouses rocks were laid down as sediments between 350 and 290 million years ago. The figures trip off the tongue alright but it takes a moment for realisation to dawn. These layers are obviously different: the lower white limestone was there before the black shale accumulated on top of it. Was there some catastrophic convulsion that suddenly changed shallow sea to muddy fresh water? Perhaps there had been other layers in between but they were eroded away before the black mud arrived. Equally likely, that white-black boundary may represent a gap of perhaps ten million years - that would have been five thousand times the whole of the Christian era from the first Christmas to today, or some one hundred and fifty thousand lifetimes! And that's just the possible GAP from white to black! <<<<<<<<<<+>>>>>>>>>> Perhaps it might have been nice to have described something akin to a Geological Trail with guide-posts and numbered exhibits. But half the fun of exploration lies in making discoveries for yourself. Seahouses is already famous for its harbour facilities and wonderful sandy beaches. We hope the descriptions and pictures above will have encouraged you to add extra value to your visit by having a look at some of the rocky patches too.
PS: The relevant National Geological Survey map is England sheet 4, "Holy Island". It shows an astonishing twenty bands of coal among the limestone layers. Both the layering and the faulting are unusually complex in the Seahouses-to-Beadnell coastal area. |