Wilson, D.; Burt, C.E.; Davies, J.R.; Hall, M.; Jones, N.S.; Leslie, A.B.; Lusty, P.A.J.; Wilby, P.R.; Aspden, J.A.. 2016 Geology of the Llanidloes district : British Geological Survey Sheet 164. British Geological Survey, 47pp. (Earthwise)
Abstract
This Sheet Explanation provides a summary of the geology of the district covered by Geological 1:50 000 Series
Map Sheet 164 (Llanidloes), published in 2010 as a Bedrock and Superficial Deposits edition. The district mostly
lies within the county of Powys, but includes small parts of Ceredigion in the extreme west and south-west. Much of
the western part of the district is occupied by the deeply dissected uplands of the Cambrian Mountains, a designated
Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty. In this area the land rises to 740 m on the flanks of Plynlimon (Pumlumon
Fawr), the highest summit in the range. It falls away towards the eastern part of the district into rolling countryside
that includes the important catchment of the River Severn (Afon Hafren) and its tributaries, the largest of which are
the rivers Carno, Trannon, Cerist, Clywedog and Dulas. A major reservoir (Llyn Clywedog) occupies the upper
reaches of the Clywedog valley, its purpose being to regulate river discharge and groundwater levels within the
catchment. The south-western part of the district is drained by the River Wye (Afon Gwy) and its tributaries, that
flow south-eastwards via Llangurig. The sources of both the Severn and Wye are situated on the eastern flanks of
Plynlimon within the western part of the district.
The town of Llanidloes is the main centre of population, with smaller settlements at Llangurig, Carno, Trefeglwys,
Caersws and Staylittle; the Newtown conurbation impinges on the eastern part of the district. Much of the district is
given over to beef and dairy farming, although sheep are reared in the remote upland areas in the west and extensive
forestry plantations have been developed in places. The Ordovician and Silurian rocks of the district have been
exploited locally, in the past, as a source of building material and, recently, commercial quantities of sandstone
aggregate have been excavated at Penstrowed Quarry [SO 0680 9100]. The district includes part of the Central
Wales Mining Field from which substantial volumes of lead and zinc ore were extracted during the 19th and early
20th centuries. A number of former mine sites are still visible, notably along the Van, Nant-y-ricket, Dylife,
Dyfngwm and Llanerchyraur lodes (Jones, 1922[1]; IGS, 1974), and the historic Bryntail Mine, below the Clywedog
Dam has been restored as a site of industrial archaeological interest.
The district is underlain by a succession of Late Ordovician (Ashgill) to Silurian sedimentary rocks, over 5 km thick,
deposited between 450 and 420 million years ago in the Early Palaeozoic Welsh Basin (Figure P930911). The basin
developed on a fragment of the ancient supercontinent of Gondwana, known as Eastern Avalonia (e.g. Pickering et
al., 1988[2]), that drifted northwards to collide with the continents of Baltica and Laurentia during the Late
Ordovician and Silurian (Soper and Hutton, 1984[3]; Soper and Woodcock, 1990[4]; Woodcock and Strachan,
2000[5]). To the east and the south of the basin lay the Midland Platform, a relatively stable shallow marine shelf that
was subject to periodic emergence. The basinal sediments are predominantly deep marine turbiditic facies that were
introduced into the district by density currents from southerly, south-easterly and north-westerly quadrants. Coeval
shallower-water ‘shelfal’ sediments were deposited north and east of the district, and locally impinge on its northern
margins. Thickness variations within the major sedimentary units suggest that, at times, syndepositional fault
movements were an important control on their distribution. During late Silurian (Ludlow) times, shallowing of the
basin occurred, and sandstones, variably interpreted as a turbiditic (Cave and Hains, 2001[6]) or storm-generated
facies (Tyler and Woodcock, 1987[7]), were laid down over the eastern part of the district and adjacent areas. The
shallowing was a result of tectonic reconfiguration of the basin, a precursor to the late Caledonian (Acadian)
Orogeny that affected the region during the late Early Devonian, around 400 million years ago
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