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The Upper Greensand Formation is a Cretaceous formation of Albian to Cenomanian in age, found within the Wessex Basin and parts of the Weald Basin in southern England. [1] It overlies the Gault Clay and underlies the Chalk Group. It varies in thickness from zero to 75 m. It is predominantly a glauconitic fine-grained sandstone, locally becoming ...
A distinction is made between the Upper Greensand and Lower Greensand. The term greensand was originally applied by William Smith to glauconitic sandstones in the west of England and subsequently used for the similar deposits of the Weald, before it was appreciated that the latter are actually two distinct formations separated by the Gault Clay ...
Stratigraphically above the Lower Greensand Group is the Selborne Group which comprises a suite of mudstones, siltstones, sandstones and limestones laid down during the Albian age between 112 and 94 million years ago. It divides into an earlier Gault Formation and a later Upper Greensand Formation.
The formation is lithologically similar to the Ashdown Formation and comprises complex cyclic sequences of siltstones with sandstones and clays, typically fining upwards. In the western parts of the county the Tunbridge Wells Sands can be divided into three; the Lower Tunbridge Wells Sand, the Grinstead Clay, and the Upper Tunbridge Wells Sand.
Overlying the Lower Greensand are the two formations which comprise the Selborne Group; the Albian age Gault Formation and the Upper Greensand Formation which extends from the Albian into the Cenomanian (c.100.5-94 Ma) thereby straddling the boundary with the Late Cretaceous epoch.
Upper Border Formation: Carboniferous: Upper Bowland Shales: Carboniferous: Upper Calcareous Grit: Jurassic: Upper Chalk Formation: Cretaceous: Upper Coal Measures Formation: Carboniferous: Upper Comley Formation: Cambrian: Upper Greensand Formation: Cretaceous: Upper Headon Beds: Palaeogene: Upper Limestone Group / Main Limestone IX Formation ...
The dome was formed of an upper layer of Chalk above subsequent layers of Upper Greensand, Gault, Lower Greensand, Weald Clay and the Hastings Beds. The top of the dome eventually eroded away through weathering and ridges and valleys resulted across Kent and Sussex due to the exposed clay eroding at a faster rate than the exposed chalk ...
The Wealden Group is overlain by the Lower Greensand and the Gault Formation, consisting of the Gault and the Upper Greensand. [4] The rocks of the central part of the anticline include hard sandstones, and these form hills now called the High Weald.