The South Coast of Taranaki near Hawera has extensive
rocky beaches lined by high crumbling cliffs. It is a great place for
geology, but you should be wary of the potential for cliff falls,
especially after rain. This is the view east from the Ohawe beach access
point.
A first look at the cliff from a safe distance shows that
it is made of two main rock types; massive grey muddy sandstone at the
bottom, with darker brown soft stratified layers above. The boundary
between the two layers is very distinct and can be seen for many
kilometres along the coastline.
If you take a closer look at some of the muddy sandstone
boulders lying on the beach, you can find some nice fossils such as this
scallop.
In places these rocks are very bioturbated. In other words they have been churned up by organisms that burrowed through them when they were part of the sea floor.
For a close up look at the boundary between the two
layers that form these cliffs, a good place to go is the beach access
track 4.5 kilometres east at Waihi Beach (end of Denby Road see www.geotrips.org.nz/trip.html?id=55 for location and geological info). There,
right before you reach the beach, is an easily accessible outcrop where
you approach the boundary safely.
Here is a slightly closer view - you can see the change
from the lower grey unit containing oysters and scallops with the shell
rich layers above. The fossils in the lower unit indicate an environment
of deposition about 20 to 50 metres deep. This layer is approximately
3.5 million years old.
Here is another image where can see the incredibly abrupt change from the lower muddy sandstone to a much looser sandstone packed with shells.
Just below the boundary there are some vertically positioned shells in a line. These have burrowed down into the sediment from above and have been preserved in life position. Although they are found within the 3.5 million year old sandstone, they are actually only as old as the overlying shelly layer, which is about 125 000 years old .
This means that the 3.5 million year sea floor sediment has been uplifted, eroded down to sea level, and then covered with shelly beach or estuarine deposits of much younger age. Nearly three and a half million years are missing from the sequence.
Interestingly the same unconformity is widespread across Taranaki. Here you can see it at Wai-iti Beach on the north coast. Here the time gap is even greater, as the underlying grey sediments are about 8 million years old and represent deposition at about 500 metres water depth. This shows that there has been greater uplift and erosion in the north compared to the south Taranaki coast.
Here is a video of Kyle Bland explaining the Waihi outcrop and the story revealed by fossils:
Thanks for these posts! I learned a lot.
ReplyDeleteHi Julian
ReplyDeletefound your blog [the piece about Waihi Beach near Hawera}while trying understand what i've discovered ar Patea after recent earthquakes. Large cliffs start at one end of the beach and recent earthquakes brought down some of the lowest layer of one cliff. I expected it to be the very fine Papa mudstone but was very surprised to find that it was actually compacted dark grey sand which breaks up quite easily. It has defined layering and when i break the layers across i can see what i think are small pieces of mica. Could i be looking at volcanic ash? further up the beach i see that beneath this layer of sand there is more of the very fine Papa.
What do you think? or perhps you're aware of this sandy layer already?
Tony Reardon