- Geology of Gloucestershire
Gloucestershire is one of the most geologically and scenically diverse counties inEngland , with rocks from thePrecambrian through to theJurassic represented. These varying rock-types are responsible for the three major areas of the county, each with its own distinctive scenery and land-use - theForest of Dean in the west, borderingWales , theCotswolds in the east, and in between, the Severn Vale.Forest of Dean
The
Forest of Dean , situated between the riversSevern andWye , is formed of a raised basin ofpalaeozoic rocks folded in theVariscan Orogeny , similar to theSouth Wales coalfield to the west. Underlain by great thicknesses of theOld Red Sandstone , the basin is filled withCarboniferous limestones, sandstones andcoal measures - all of which have contributed to the industrial history of the region. Sometimes called ‘the prettiest coal-field in Britain’, the Forest’s main coal output was in the 18th, 19th and early 20th centuries, although for hundreds of years coal has been won in the area via ‘free-mines’, which could only be operated by local people known asFreeminer s. One or two survive today. Small-scale mining has been enabled by the exposed nature of the coalfield, with seams often outcropping at surface.Iron-ore has been extracted from labyrinthine mines or 'Scowles ' in the limestone since at least Roman times. Several large quarries are still at work in the area, providing Carboniferous limestone for road surfacing and also Pennantsandstone (see picture) - a popular building stone used notably byThomas Telford for the Over road bridge, spanning theRiver Severn nearGloucester .The scenic
Wye Valley defines the western edge of Dean as well as the England/Wales border. Impressive cliffs have been cut by the river in lower Dolomitic sections of theCarboniferous Limestone , most notably at the popular ‘Symonds Yat ’ viewpoint, which affords one of the most famous views in England. Other ‘Karst ’ features such as caves, rock pillars andsink holes abound in this area.On the north-east edge of Dean the
Silurian period is represented by the distinctive inlier ofMay Hill , which rises to some 970 feet, crowned with a pine plantation. This isolated hill lies on the north-southMalvern fault line and affords superb views from its summit of the Severn Vale, with the Cotswolds forming the horizon beyond. A high degree of faulting complicates the geology of the May Hill area, causing outcrops of Wenlock limestone and Downton Castle sandstone on its flanks, as well as a possibly Precambrian section of the core of the hill exposed at Huntley quarry. The hilltop is of Llandovery age May Hill sandstone.evern Vale
To the east is the wide fertile
Severn Vale , floored byTriassic 'New Red' sandstones and marls of theMercia Mudstones group (formerly known as the 'Keuper '), andJurassic lias clays further east. TheTriassic deposits were formed in aSahara -like desert when the British Isles lay about 15 degrees north of theequator , whereas the clays represent deep-water sediments. The landscape here is flattish, with the only feature of note a rather weak low scarp which meanders across the vale from SW to NE marking the Triassic/Jurassic border. This is superbly illustrated at the ‘Garden Cliff’,Westbury-on-Severn (see picture), where the riverSevern has sliced a convenient ‘cut-away’ section of this transition from the redTriassic marl s, through the thinPenarth Group (formerly 'Rhaetic') strata, to the lias clays and limestones of the lowerJurassic .Traditional building stone in the Severn Vale is scarce, necessitating brick or
half-timbered construction in the main, although along the scarp mentioned above harder limestone bands in the Lower Lias (known as 'Blue Lias') have been used in vernacular building.Towards the east side of the
Severn Vale the Lias clays are overlain by the sands and limestones of the Middle Lias - well displayed on the slopes of Robinswood Hill, aJurassic outlier overlooking the city ofGloucester . Further east, forming a rather unstable base to theCotswold escarpment, are the sands and clays of the Upper Lias.Superficial deposits are widespread. Floodplain
alluvium accompanies the course of the Severn itself as well as tributaries such as the Leadon, Chelt, Frome and Cam. Ancient terraces of former, more elevated floodplains mark the position of the major rivers through various glacial and inter-glacial periods in the lastIce Age . A sheet of mainlyJurassic limestone fan gravel probably covered most of the vale in the past but has since been eroded away leaving isolated deposits, most notably the Cheltenham Sand, which forms a well-draining light soil in the Cheltenham-Gloucester region.The Cotswolds
The Middle-Jurassic
oolitic limestone series which forms the bulk of theCotswolds hills contains the best-known of the county’s rocks on account of its extensive use throughout the area as a building stone. All from churches to humble cottages have been imbued with a mellow, warm character from the golden yellow colour of the stone - to which many ‘honey-pot’ Cotswold towns owe their modern popularity and prosperity. The series is divided into the Inferior and GreatOolite Groups. The Inferior Oolite, capping the main north-west facing escarpment, comprises up to 100m of mainly oolitic limestones including the Cheltenham freestone - quarried most extensively atLeckhampton and used widely in the distinctiveRegency architecture ofCheltenham . The Great Oolite, forming much of the rather barren Cotswold plateau, encompasses a variety of oolitic, shelly, sandy or marly limestone beds, many of which are used for building purposes such as dry-stone walling and roof tiles.The limestones were predominantly laid down in a shallow warm continental sea, similar to that off the present-day
Bahamas , and are rich in fossils of hard-shelled sea creatures such asbrachiopods andsea urchins . Clay bands (e.g. the Fuller's Earth Clay at the base of the Great Oolite Series) represent deeper water periods. As the Cotswold dip-slope is followed toward the south-eastern county extremities these clays and mudstones begin to predominate as the Upper Jurassic periodOxford Clay .Most of the Cotswold rivers flow south-eastwards down the dip-slope, supplying the river
Thames , whose headwaters lie at the bottom of the slope on the Upper Jurassic clays. Terrace deposits up to 6m thick of mainly local oolitic limestone gravels have been left by the river Thames in its upper course during glacial and peri-glacial periods. Downcutting and a gradual southerly migration of the river has left a succession of four terraces at varying heights, chiefly north of its present course.Other areas
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Gloucestershire 's oldest rocks occur at Chase End hill in the extreme north-west of the county, wherePrecambrian hornblende -gneiss of the Malvern Group forms the southern end of theMalvern Hills before plunging under theTriassic cover.
* Poorly exposedCambrian shales ofTremadoc age form an inlier extending from theTortworth area (betweenGloucester andBristol ) northwards to Tites Point on theRiver Severn . TheSilurian is also represented in theTortworth area, with rocks outcropping along a continuation of the Malvern fault belt south of the Severn.
*Carboniferous rocks give rise to theBristol coalfield in south-westGloucestershire .ee also
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Geology of the UK
*Gloucestershire
*Forest of Dean
*Cotswolds External links
* [http://www.glosgeotrust.org.uk Gloucestershire Geology Trust]
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