Geology

Fossils at Carsaig Bay

Carsaig beach, Mull 63On a spring day a few years ago Colin and I found ourselves in the south-west of Mull, and took a drive down the road that winds its way from Pennyghael across some lonely stretches of moorland before dipping down quite steeply towards Carsaig.

From the car park we headed eastwards along the shore – it was not the easiest of walks, being boggy in places – and found ourselves on a beach that was strewn with huge rounded boulders,Β  the kind that giants would use to play marbles.

Stretching away from the boulder fields, down into the sea itself, were flat beds of shale, pitted here and there with shallow pools… and, to my delight, I found that they were teeming with fossils.

Carsaig beach, Mull 4Carsaig beach, Mull 43Carsaig beach, Mull 3Being the kind of person that gets excited over just one fossil, you can imagine how I felt at seeing manyΒ hundreds, all jumbled together as if their Cretaceous cocktail party had come to a premature end. Β  To add to the delight, living molluscs – limpets, periwinkles and barnacles – had colonised the same surfaces, carrying on their daily cycles of feeding and shutting, right next to the remains of their distant ancestors.

Among the fossils that you can find at Carsaig are ammonites, belemnites, and the aptly-named devil’s toenails or Gryphaea. Β  I managed to find several examples of ammonites and Gryphaea, but it was only when I looked again at my photos that I saw what I thought might be belemnites. Β  These are bullet-shapedΒ crustaceans, believed to be the ancestors of squid, but with hard internal skeletons.

Carsaig beach, Mull 31

Gryphaea or devil's toenails
Gryphaea or devil’s toenails
Ammonite
Ammonites were found in the Jurassic seas when dinosaurs roamed the land. Where the actual fossil remains have been washed away, the casts often remain.
Bed of Gryphaea, colonised by limpets
Bed of Gryphaea, colonised by limpets
Ammonite
Ammonite
Gryphaea
Jumble of Gryphaea
Ammonite cast with possible belemnite (opinions welcome!)
Ammonite cast with possible belemnite (opinions welcome!)

JUST FOR SCALE…

Jurassic: Β  200 to 145 million years ago

The Hebrides had drifted 30 to 40 degrees north of the Equator.Β  Plant and animal life flourished. Β Sedimentation in shallow seas, and an abundance of ‘shelly’ fossils.

Cretaceous: Β  145 to 65 million years ago

Warm shallow seas widespread across most of NW Europe. Β Marine sands and chalk were deposited. Β  Gentle folding, uplift and erosion may have created a lowland landscape around the Hebrides at about 45 degrees north.

From β€˜Mull and Iona – a landscape fashioned by geology’ by David Stephenson (BGS)

Carsaig is backed by cliffs of basaltic lava which formed over 60 million years ago in a thick layer on top of the sedimentary rock.Β  The sea has simply eaten it away, exposing a fossil-rich surface beneath.

Looking back up from the shore, with the purplish haze of birch trees in early spring
Looking back up from the shore, with the purplish haze of birch trees in early spring

Carsaig 3Carsaig 4Carsaig 5Carsaig beach, Mull 61At one point the shore is bisected byΒ a long, spine-like feature calledΒ a dyke – a vertical layer of igneous rock which formed when molten material seepedΒ into a fissure in the earth’s surface.Β  This is harder than the surrounding shale, and is taking longer for the sea to erode.

Carsaig beach, Mull 25

LIFE IN THE ROCK POOLS

Carsaig beach, Mull 51

Further along from Carsaig are some impressive coastal arches, whileΒ on the remote cliffs of the Burg in the west of MullΒ is a fossilised tree trunkΒ known as MacCulloch’s tree.Β  Both of these sites demand a long and strenuous walk.Β  Mull is also known for its stepped β€˜trap landscape’ aroundΒ west-facing coasts, created by the erosion of lava layers.

In this video by Isle of Mull Cottages, geologist James Westland talks about theΒ landscapeΒ of Carsaig Bay and other sitesΒ on the island.

Dobhran CroftStaying on the Isle of Mull

If you’re planning a holiday on Mull, take a look at the wideΒ selection of self-catering accommodationΒ offered by Isle of Mull Cottages. Β  The propertyΒ shown here is called Dobhran Croft, a beautifully renovated croft cottageΒ byΒ Lochbuie.

 

Sources:

Plenty of ideas forΒ walks around the Isle of Mull can be found at Walk Highlands


 

Staffa (3)
The island of Staffa

More on Scotland’s geology…

26 Comments

  • Pat

    I love geology, fossils and tidal pools! What a marvelous place.I’d never heard of the dyke before, very interesting feature.Thanks for the information, photos and the video. It’s always good to hear from an expert. Can you tell I enjoyed this post? πŸ™‚

  • Nancy

    Thank you for this interesting post. I was at Carsaig in June and passed a couple who were returning to their car. I asked them how their walk was and they mentioned that they’d been looking for fossils. I’ve been to Carsaig a number of times (because of its role in the film “I Know Where I’m Going!”) but I’d never known that there were fossils there. Sure enough, when I went on my walk I found a marvelous rock with many brachiopod impressions in it. How do I know they were brachipods? Well, I sent a photograph to the Head of the School of Geological and Earth Science. at the University of Glasgow (thank you, Google search!), Maggie Cusack, and she wrote back, “You have some nice brachiopods there so indicating a marine environment.Brachiopods first appeared about 550 million years ago and they still occur in all of the world’s oceans but they are now much less abundant than molluscs.” I would love to post a picture but there doesn’t seem to be a way to do that.

    • Jo Woolf

      Hi Nancy, lovely to hear about your trip to Carsaig! Yes, you’re right – I’d forgotten about that film! I’m so glad that you found some fossils. I know how exciting it is! πŸ™‚ Brachiopods – I don’t think I saw any of these, although at the time I didn’t photograph everything. I’ve often thought that it would be good for WordPress to include an option for people to post pics in comments. You can always share a pic on my Facebook page if you’d like (scroll down for link).

  • tearoomdelights

    I can imagine your delight on discovering all those fossils. Your photo of the ammonite gave me a little thrill of excitement because it’s such a recognisable one. Mull has so much to offer, hasn’t it? A great place for a holiday, especially if you get weather like you had in these lovely pictures.

    • Jo Woolf

      It was such fun, Lorna! That little ammonite is really only about the size of a finger nail. I love Mull and it’s been too long since we were there. Every part of it is beautiful.

  • justbod

    Thanks Jo – another very beautiful place to add to the ever-growing must-visit list! Love the fossil photos and the beautiful ‘dyke’ geological feature. I really must give up work and take to travelling to all these places full-time (if only!) as I think that may be the only way I get to complete the list!

    • Jo Woolf

      I think you’ve got just the right idea! There is so much to see, just on Mull alone – wildlife, history, geology. Each Scottish island would need at least 3 months! πŸ™‚ Thanks for your lovely comment.

    • Jo Woolf

      Thank you very much, Andy! You obviously know your geology! Excellent – I didn’t know I’d found a belemnite! πŸ™‚ Now I want to go back and have another look for it!

      • Jo Woolf

        I often wish I knew more about the rocks I’m always picking up – what they are made of, and how they were formed. Yes, Mull is calling to us at the moment! I want to get on a ferry now!

      • Fife Photos and Art

        Wow!!! It’s so unusual to hear someone else say that they are fascinated about how various rocks form, that’s what got me into the subject many moons ago. Many folk, if they have an interest at all, just like looking for fossils or semi precious gemstones, not that there’s anything wrong with that, I hasten to add!

      • Jo Woolf

        I have watched a few programmes by Iain Stewart and I admire the way he says he can ‘read’ a landscape in the way a geologist can – seeing folds and intrusions and being able to identify them and date them, and know what has caused this or that feature. I am still blown away by crystals and the fact that they form naturally within the earth. Part of me dislikes the fact that we dig them up at all, but I still can’t resist going into crystal shops!

    • Jo Woolf

      Fantastic, Andy, thanks for the link! How amazing – I would love to find some dinosaur footprints. I can only imagine their excitement. I remember struggling back up a cliff (well, a very steep coastal hill!) with a big ammonite fossil that I’d found on a beach on Skye, and I refused to part with it! Might have to do a post on that sometime, come to think of it! πŸ™‚

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