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Old Red Sandstone 

Old Red Sandstone
Type Geological formation
Age Late Silurian
Lithology
Primary Sandstone
Other Conglomerate, Shale
Location
Country United Kingdom

The Old Red Sandstone is a rock formation of considerable importance to early paleontology.

Contents

Sedimentology

Bedding plane of Old Red Sandstone with quartz and chert pebbles; central England; scale bar is 10 mm.
Bedding plane of Old Red Sandstone with quartz and chert pebbles; central England; scale bar is 10 mm.
Cross-section through a sample of the Old Red Sandstone showing quartz and chert pebbles; central England; scale bar is 10 mm.
Cross-section through a sample of the Old Red Sandstone showing quartz and chert pebbles; central England; scale bar is 10 mm.

The Old Red Sandstone describes a sandstone deposited after the Acadian Orogeny in the late Silurian, and before the Carboniferous.dubious

The body of rock, or facies, is dominated by alluvial sediments and conglomerates at its base, and progresses to a combination of dunes, lakes and river sediments.

Its familiar red colour arises from the presence of iron oxide but not all the old red sandstone is red or sandstone - grey shales and conglomerates are common.

History of study

In the early 1800s, the paleontology of the formation was studied intensively by Hugh Miller, Henry Thomas De la Beche, Roderick Murchison, and Adam Sedgwick -- Sedgwick's interpretation was the one that placed it in the Devonian, and in fact it was he that coined that word. Many of the science of stratigraphy's early debates were about the Old Red Sandstone. Old Red Sandstone often occur in conjunction with conglomerate formations, one such noteworthy cliffside exposure being the Fowlsheugh Nature Reserve, Kincardineshire.

Common Building Stone

In regions where the formation is near the surface, many stone houses are built of the rocks quarried from it. Notable examples can be found in the area surrounding Stirling [1], Stonehaven [2], Perth [3], and Tayside. The inhabitants of Caithness [4] at the northeastern tip of Scotland also used the stone to a considerable extent.

Note that in older geological works predating theories of plate tectonics, the United States' Catskill Delta formation is sometimes referred to as part of the Old Red Sandstone. In the modern day, however, it is recognized that the two are not stratigraphically continuous but are very similar due to being formed at approximately the same time by the same processes.

Notable buildings constructed of Old Red Sandstone

See also

External links

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