Chalk Group Lithostratigraphy: East Anglia - Totternhoe Stone

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The Totternhoe Stone (= Burwell Rock of the Cambridge district) is as described in the adjacent Chilterns region. It is a brownish, gritty, shell-rich calcarenitic chalk bed, typically with phosphatic nodules at its base, with a conspicuous, and locally strongly down-cutting basal erosion surface. In parts of East Anglia (eg. Cambridge district) it forms a strong topographical feature (Worssam & Taylor, 1969). Around Cambridge it is c. 6 m thick, but thins northward across the region to c. 1.5 m in south Norfolk, and c. 0.7 m thick at Hunstanton in north Norfolk (Worssam & Taylor, 1969; Peake & Hancock, 1970; Gallois, 1994).

Macrofossil Biozonation: A. rhotomagense Zone

Correlation: see Correlation with other UK Chalk Group successions

References

GALLOIS, R W.1994. Geology of the country around King's Lynn and The Wash. Memoir of the British Geological Survey.

PEAKE, N B & HANCOCK, J M. 1970. The Upper Cretaceous of Norfolk [reprinted with corrigenda and addenda] In LARWOOD, G P & FUNNELL, B M (eds.), The Geology of Norfolk. London & Ashford.

WORSSAM, B C & TAYLOR, J H. 1969. Geology of the country around Cambridge. Memoir of the British Geological Survey.

See: Totternhoe Stone (Chilterns and adjacent regions)