- Uley Bury
Uley Bury is the long, flat-topped hill just outside
Uley ,Gloucestershire ,England . It is an impressive multi-vallate, scarp-edgeIron Age hill fort dating from around 300 B.C. Standing some 750 feet (235 metres) above sea level it commands spectacular views over theSevern Vale .Geology
Uley Bury is a spur of the Cotswold
escarpment , made up of thick beds of inferior ooliticlimestone of theJurassic period, overlying Bridport Sands. Part of the Bury is aSite of Special Scientific Interest (SSSI) famous for abundant fossils of Lower Jurassic age which occur here in the stratum known as the "Cephalopod Bed". One particular horizon is especially noted for theammonite s it contains, which indicate that the strata are of early "striatulum" subzone age. Below in the Bridport Sand strata a thin, isolatedsandstone layer contains what are elsewhere very rare ammonites, known as "Haugia variabilis".Archaeology
Uley Bury hill fort is a very large
Iron Age settlement with evidence of occupation from approximately 300BC to 100AD; it covers 32 acres (13 hectares). It is one of a number of hillforts that can be seen along the Cotswold escarpment, other notable examples being Crickley Hill and Painswick Beacon.The Bury is surrounded on all sides, apart from at the northern corner, by steep natural slopes. The hill fort was created by terracing a double line of ramparts – more than a mile in length overall - into the hillsides.
Excavations carried out on the north eastern rampart during the 1970’s found evidence of how the ramparts were constructed. Finds during this excavation included a crouched burial, iron currency bars, quern stones, a brooch, and large amounts of pottery. Finds made at other times include a gold coin of the
Dobunni , and a silver Roman coin.Aerial photography has revealed extensive crop marks suggesting that there were once numerous dwellings in the interior of the hill fort; however, these have not yet been excavated.
Uley Bury is a
Scheduled Ancient Monument . Hetty Pegler’s Tump, a notableNeolithic long barrow , and West Hill, the site of aRomano-British temple, are both nearby.Ecology
Uley Bury is an important wildlife habitat because of its unimproved limestone grassland, which has been created by centuries of grazing. The Bury lies in the Cotswold Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty (AONB) which holds a nationally significant concentration (52%) of all the unimproved Jurassic limestone grassland in the UK. A programme of regular summer grazing designed to conserve the grassland on the Bury was started in 2004.
Location
Uley Bury is located at
grid reference ST 787992 (coord|51|41.3|N|2|18.7|W|region:GB_scale:100000_type:landmark|display=inline,title). The main access is from the Dursley to Stroud road (B4066) at Crawley Hill, just north of Uley. It can also be accessed from theCotswold Way , and from several other local footpaths and bridleways.References
* Alan Seville, “Uley Bury and Norbury Hillforts” (1983), Western Archaeological Trust, ISBN 0-904918-20-3
* Ed. Alan Bebbington, “A History of Uley, Gloucestershire” (2003), The Uley Society, ISBN 0-9544525-0-XExternal links
* [http://www.livinggloucester.co.uk/search/collection/results/?id=LG01037c.jpg] Gold Stater of the Dobunni found on Uley Bury in 1885
* [http://www.english-nature.org.uk/special/sssi/searchresults.cfm?sssi_name=coaley+wood&frmcounty=] Coaley Wood Site of Special Scientific Interest (SSSI)
* [http://www.cotswoldsaonb.com/files/uploads/11_39_grassland.pdf] Article on the conservation of Cotswold limestone grassland
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.