The Group comprises a thick
unit of coarse
sandstone known as the
Twrch Sandstone (formerly the ‘Basal Grit’) which is overlain by the
Bishopston Mudstone and the
Telpyn Point Sandstone. The
mudstones of these latter two formations was formerly known as the ‘Middle Shales’, a name reflecting the position of this sequence sandwiched between the Basal Grit below and the
Farewell Rock, the lowermost sandstone of the South Wales
Coal Measures, above. The mudstone itself contains a few bands of sandstone such as the ‘Twelve Foot Sandstone’ and locally the ‘Cumbriense Sandstone’. Likewise the Twrch Sandstone contains bands of mudstone, often correlating with
marine bands. The sequence as developed along the north crop of the South Wales Coalfield varies along its length but within the mudstone which forms the greater thickness of the Bishopston Mudstone Formation, the following are observed: • Subcrenatum Sandstone • Cumbriense Quartzite • Sub-Cumbriense Sandstone • Sub-Carbonicola Sandstone • Sub-Cancellatum Sandstone • Twelve-foot Sandstone Note that the names of many of the sandstone units are derived from the marine bands (themselves named for diagnostic fossils within them) beneath which they typically occur. Not all of the sandstones occur within any one place, the Subcrenatum thins out to the east whilst the typically double-layered Cumbriense Sandstone thins out to the west. Further west in Pembrokeshire the sequence above and including the Sub-Carbonicola is absent and is replaced by the Telpyn Point Sandstone Formation. ==Landscapes==