Quantocks and North Somerset Coast (eBook)
144 Seiten
The Crowood Press (Verlag)
978-0-7198-4044-9 (ISBN)
Dave Green is a semi-retired teacher of geology with some fifty years' experience, mainly in schools and in further education. At present he teaches part-time in Ross-on-Wye and runs evening classes there and in Gloucester. His main interest is in field geology and landscape development, for which he runs many trips, both at home and abroad.
West Somerset is an area of great geological diversity, straddling the Tees-Exe Line between highland and lowland Britain. The story of the last 400 million years of Earth history can be gleaned from its rocks: the opening and closing of oceans, the collision of continents and a journey across the Equator. The area may also provide the key to settle the controversy about the origin of South-West England, whose ancient geology is so different from the rest of the country. This unique and diverse geology is also the reason why it is one of the most beautiful and varied stretches of landscape in England. With nearly 170 illustrations, including maps, charts, diagrams and colour photographs, this book describes and explains the evidence for the geological history of the area, from the Palaeozoic, through the Mesozoic to the Pleistocene and Holocene. Regional guides, which discuss the factors that led to the landscape we see today and offer places of interest to visit, cover: the Northern Brendon Hills and Minehead; the Southern Brendon Hills; Wellington and the Blackdown Hills; Wiveliscombe and the Vale of Stogumber; the Quantock Hills; West Somerset coast and the Cannington and Bridgwater Lowlands.
CHAPTER 1
Geology and Scenery in West Somerset
For the purposes of this book, I am taking West Somerset to mean (very approximately) the area covered by a rectangle between the towns of Minehead, Bridgwater, Taunton and Dulverton. It covers the Bridgwater lowlands, the Vale of Taunton Deane including the Blackdown Hills escarpment and Wellington, the Quantock Hills (designated the very first Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty, in 1957), the Vale of Stogumber, the Brendon Hills and the Exe valley, the Vale of Porlock, the Cleeve lowlands around Minehead and the hills around that town.
It is an area of great contrasts in both geology and the scenery related to it. Inland, there are the uplands of the Quantocks and Brendon Hills, founded on tough, ancient, twisted and partly metamorphosed Devonian rocks, the two hill ranges being separated by the lush and fertile Taunton to Williton valley, eroded into bright red New Red Sandstone laid down in the hot deserts of the Permian and Triassic Periods. It is so strange that this distinctive sheltered vale, with its beautiful, warm stonebuilt villages and sunken lanes, has no formal name, beyond being a northern extension of the Vale of Taunton Deane. Many commercial organizations are starting to use the term ‘Quantock Vale’, but there is an older term, used by A.N. Thomas in his 1940 geological paper on the Triassic rocks: the ‘Vale of Stogumber’. The southern boundary is framed by the imposing escarpment of the Blackdown Hills, composed of silica-rich sediments deposited much later, in the Cretaceous Period.
Looking east from Coombe Cross, near Monksilver. This view shows the northern end of the Vale of Stogumber and the Watchet coastal lowlands towards the north Quantocks and Hinkley Point. The observer is standing on Morte Slates (foreground soil stained red by the former cover of New Red Sandstone) looking down into the gently undulating lowlands, composed of Permian and Triassic rocks. Much of the farming is arable.
A sketch of the topography of West Somerset. Comparison with the geological map should reveal close correlations, such as the contrast between the resistant Palaeozoic and much weaker Mesozoic rocks; also areas where there is little relationship, such as the Brendon Hill plateau, cut across a variety of rock units.
Simplified geological map of West Somerset (OPPOSITE PAGE), and a sketch to show the geology and scenery between Wiveliscombe and Nether Stowey looking north-west along the Vale of Stogumber, with the contrast between the strong Palaeozoic rocks of the Quantock Hills and the weaker Mesozoic rocks of the Vale.
On the coast, late Triassic and early Jurassic sedimentary rocks laid down in a shallow tropical sea around 200 million years ago form the majority of this spectacular cliffed shoreline. Inland, the same rocks form the Cleeve Lowlands, east of Minehead, and the rolling country between East Quantoxhead and Combwich. The exceptions to this are lowlying areas, especially around Bridgwater, that were drowned by the rise of the sea level as the last Ice Age waned and have been reclaimed by drainage schemes over the centuries. These areas have a veneer of recently deposited sediment dating from the last 10,000 years – the Holocene Period – and are extremely flat.
Not all of the scenery of the area is related to underlying rock types; for many millions of years, the Bristol Channel has been an active tectonic zone. As we shall see, some geologists believe it was a crustal scale fracture akin to the famous San Andreas Fault in California, but we know that there are thick Triassic and Jurassic sediments under the channel, laid down in a sinking graben (or rift valley) between faults aligned east to west along the channel. At various times in the last 300 milliom years, the faults have woken into reactivation, causing earthquakes and shattering rocks along the line of the faults. On land, the fault zones have brought rocks of different resistance next to one another (such as the Cothelstone Fault), providing the locus for intense erosion along the narrow zone of broken and weakened rock to form straight deep valleys (the prime example being along the Monksilver Fault), and have allowed some areas to rise and start to be eroded, and some areas to sink, in some cases below sea level. All of the rocks of the area have had sets of cracks (joints) imposed upon them, due to the stresses exerted during these episodes. These have had a profound impact, best visible where the rocks are completely exposed, along the coast.
West Somerset Geology and People
The economy and settlement of the region is also closely related to the underlying geology. The older and more resistant rocks of the uplands have long been exploited for building materials. These include the metamorphic slate of the Oakhampton (Morte Slates) and Treborough (Ilfracombe Slates) quarries, once used for flooring and fireplaces, as well as roofing and walling, but now mainly infilled; and the hard quartzitic sandstones such as the Pickwell Down Sandstone in Wiveliscombe, or the Hangman Grit exploited at West Quantoxhead, used for building stone and latterly as aggregate for tracks, roads and concrete. The weaker New Red Sandstone of the Vale is more easily worked and has been extensively used as building stone, though it is sometimes more susceptible to weathering than the stronger Devonian rocks.
The Blue Anchor Fault (described in Chapter 10).
Bricks and tiles have been made from Triassic Mercia Mudstone in Minehead, Wellington and Taunton, as well as some smaller yards such as Blue Anchor and Wiveliscombe (where Aylesbeare Mudstone was used), and in Bridgwater, where modern alluvial clays were dug. On the coast, harder Triassic and Jurassic limestones have been used for building, producing distinctive pale-grey to cream-coloured buildings.
In the absence of extensive glaciers and their far-travelled load, the soils of the region, and thereby the use to which the land is put, are derived from the local underlying rocks. The harder quartz-rich sandstones of the uplands break down very slowly and do not contain a good supply of elements such as calcium to counteract the acidifying effect of high rainfall and downward leaching of soil nutrients. Consequently, soils are thin, stony, acid and poor in nutrients, producing moorland vegetation of heather, gorse, bracken and coarse grasses used mainly for extensive grazing and often nowadays almost abandoned by agriculture in favour of recreation and forestry.
The Southern Brendon Hills, viewed from the main Brendon Ridge, looking south. The geology is the Upper Morte Slates, forming high ground and used for grazing. The accordance of summit heights suggests that this area was once a plain near sea level that has been uplifted to form a plateau, which was subsequently cut by deeply incised river valleys – here the upper tributaries of the River Tone.
Vernacular architecture in Wiveliscombe. This house, towards the west of the town, is constructed of Pickwell Down Sandstone, a hard-wearing building stone with a distinctive red-purple colour, probably quarried in Alps Quarry, 200m west. Roofing and flooring (and some building stone) came from Oakhampton quarries to the north, working the Upper Morte Slates.
Vellow Pottery. A cordwainer’s house built in the 1830s in the Vale of Stogumber, with older outbuildings. It has been used as a hay barn, a blacksmith’s and, since the 1960s, a pottery. It is constructed from Budleigh Salterton Pebble Beds, a warm red rock mostly made of angular fragments of mainly local Devonian slates and sandstones. The roof was originally covered with slate from Treborough.
Pebble Beds and sandstone used in construction of the Pottery. The cementing sandy matrix is commonly lime-rich, making it soft enough to allow dressing to produce blocks like these. The fragments now stand proud from the matrix that has been chemically weathered.
The mudstones of the upland areas, now metamorphosed to slates, such as the Ilfracombe and Morte Slates, produce less high ground, form thicker soils and retain water, impeding leaching. Consequently, they are mostly farmed, the majority being under permanent pasture and the better drained districts used for arable crops. The tendency towards acid soils in these wet upland areas can be rectified using lime (calcium carbonate), an alkaline substance produced today by crushing limestone, but in the past, without crushing machinery, the easiest way was by ‘burning’ or calcining limestone by heating it to over 850°C in a limekiln with wood and/or coal to drive off carbon dioxide and produce quicklime (calcium oxide) powder. When spread on to the soil, the quicklime was ‘slaked’ back to calcium carbonate by taking up water from the soil and carbon dioxide from the atmosphere. Something of a fad in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, the repeated application of these caustic alkaline substances eventually destroyed the soil fauna, therefore also humus production and leading to loss of fertility. A German adage from the late nineteenth century says ‘Lime lime and nothing more, makes fathers rich and sons poor’.
Another major use for quicklime was in the production of lime mortar and for whitewashing buildings. The main source for lime in this area was thin, often impersistent limestones (four or five bands) interbedded with slates in the Ilfracombe...
Erscheint lt. Verlag | 23.5.2022 |
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Verlagsort | London |
Sprache | englisch |
Themenwelt | Sachbuch/Ratgeber ► Natur / Technik ► Natur / Ökologie |
Naturwissenschaften ► Geowissenschaften ► Geologie | |
Schlagworte | Blackdown Hills • Bridgwater Lowlands • Britain • Cannington • coast • Dunkery Beacon • England • fossils • geological • Geology • Haddon Hill • Haddon Hill, Somerset Levels • Hangman Sandstone • Jurassic Sediments • Kilve • Kilve, River Exe • Land • Local • Mesozoic • Minehead • moorland hills • Northern Brendon Hills • North Hill • Palaeozoic • Parrett estuary • Parrett estuary, Jurassic sediments • Permian • Quantocks • River Exe • River Tone • River Tone, Taunton • Somerset • Somerset Levels • Southern Brendon Hills • Taunton • The Quantock Hills • Vale of Stogumber • Walking Guide • Wellington • Wiveliscombe |
ISBN-10 | 0-7198-4044-9 / 0719840449 |
ISBN-13 | 978-0-7198-4044-9 / 9780719840449 |
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