Geology of Orkney
The geology of the Orkney islands in northern Scotland is dominated by the Devonian Old Red Sandstone. In the southwestern part of Mainland, this sequence can be seen to rest unconformably on a Moinian type metamorphic basement.
Metamorphic basement
Metamorphic rocks are exposed near Stromness and Yesnaby on Mainland and on Graemsay. Most of the basement consists of granitic gneisses and later minor intrusions. These rocks are similar to those exposed in northern Caithness and have been correlated with the Loch Eil Group of the late Proterozoic Loch Ness Supergroup sequence. The unconformity at the base of the overlying Devonian rocks is highly irregular, with the exposed basement forming hills in this buried land surface.Devonian
The stratigraphic breakdown of the Devonian sequence has traditionally been into Lower, Middle and Upper ORS due to a general lack of biostratigraphic control. These divisions are now known to approximate to the Lower, Middle and Upper divisions of the Devonian.Lower Devonian
Rocks of probable lower Devonian age are exposed near Yesnaby, on western Mainland. A ridge of granitic basement divides theHarra Ebb Formation, a sequence of breccias, conglomerates and sandstones deposited in an alluvial fan setting, from the Yesnaby Sandstone which was deposited in an aeolian setting. The contact with the overlying Middle Devonian lacustrine Lower Stromness Flagstones is an angular unconformity.
Middle Devonian
Most of the Old Red Sandstone of Orkney is Middle Devonian. The lower part of the sequence, mostly Eifelian in age, is dominated by lacustrine beds of the lower and upper Stromness Flagstones that were deposited in Lake Orcadie. The two flagstones sequences are divided by the Sandwick fish bed, equivalent to the Achanarras formation of Caithness, representing an unusually persistent, deep and widespread lake that filled much of the Orcadian Basin. The sequence continues with the Rousay flagstones deposited in a similar lacustrine environment. The flagstones show a marked cyclicity in their sedimentation, with 86 such cycles being counted for the whole sequence. These are interpreted as representing regular climatically driven changes in lake level caused by Milankovitch cyclicity.The Eday Group overlies the Rousay Flagstones and represents a change to dominantly fluvial/aeolian deposition with only occasional lacustrine intervals. The Eday Group consists of three sandstone units, the lower, middle and upper Eday Sandstones separated by the Eday Flagstones and Eday Marl respectively. The Eday Marl consists mainly of red and green mudstones and siltstones and is thought to have been deposited in a river floodplain environment. Locally pseudomorphs of halite have been found and rarely marine microfossils indicating that the basin was affected by occasional marine incursions at this time.
The age and stratigraphic equivalents of the Hoy sandstone sequence are a matter of continuing debate. Traditionally the presence of an unconformity at the base of the lavas beneath these sandstones on southwestern Hoy has been interpreted to mark a major time break. More recent studies have suggested that this unconformity is of only local significance as a hiatus of this age has not been recognised elsewhere in the Orcadian Basin sequence. It has been proposed that the Hoy sandstones are the lateral equivalents of the Eday Group, the thickness and associated facies changes being caused by active extensional faulting during deposition. The presence of lavas within the Eday Flagstone Formation has been used to lend support to this idea, but differences in the chemistry between these lavas and those on Hoy mean that such a correlation remains uncertain.