Fossils found by Rockwatchers
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Thank you for sending us the photographs of your Lulworth Cove discovery. It is not a fossil as such, but has a fascinating history anyway. It is almost certainly a mass of fibrous crystals of Calcite (CaCO3) which occur at this locality in the Upper Purbeck Formation in what is called the Chief Beef Member. ‘’Beef’’ in this context refers to the layers of this fibrous calcite which has formed in between layers, along bedding planes. This was probably facilitated by some folding of the strata which allowed them to gape a little where the stress forced them apart. If the groundwater is rich in dissolved lime, then these crystals could easily have formed as the rock split apart, adding a little to each crystal as it progressed so they ended up as long, linear forms. There is one other possibility, and that is that the mineral is Gypsum, but you would need to test the rock with a dilute acid (10% HCl would be best). If it reacts, it is Calcite.
The Upper Purbeck Formation was deposited in the earliest Cretaceous around 145 million years ago, but your Beef may not necessarily have crystallised out until much later, when the folding along the Dorset coast occurred, some time in the Palaeogene Period, maybe about 50 million years ago, as a distant effect of the more intense earth movements that created the Alps, Pyrenees and Carpathian mountains.
Best wishes,
Michael









