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VII.—Note on a Section in Probable Bagshot Beds on Shooters Hill, Kent

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 May 2009

Extract

In 1905 trenches for electric mains were carried up the northeastern slope of Shooters Hill, along Shrewsbury Lane to “The Bull”, and thence down the western hill-slope along the Dover Road. From about 350 O.D. in Plum Lane to 424 O.D. at “The Bull” the trench ran for nearly two-thirds of a mile along the junction of the London Clay with the overlying group of sands, pebbles, and clayey gravels which form the ‘gravel cap’ of Shooters Hill. Neither the exact age of these superficial deposits nor their mode of formation—whether marine or fluviatile beds—is as yet known, but the general coarseness of the sands, the presence of pebbles of Lower Greensand chert, and the very stiff clayey matrix of the gravel distinguish them from typical Bagshot Beds, and moreover throughout the greater part of the section a sharp and irregular junction could be traced between them and the brown London Clay. At a few points, however, the top of the London Clay was seen to pass into pale-brown and yellowish sandy clays, sometimes of significant thickness. Thus in the Dover Road, about 100 yards above Christ Church, below the thick red clayey gravel of the ‘cap’, lay about 3 feet of yellow loam, the lower part of which became a pale-brown clay passing quite gradually into normal blue or brown London Clay with septarian nodules. In the same series of excavations (1905) a trench at the junction of Shrewsbury Lane with the Dover Road showed the Shooters Hill gravel resting irregularly on a bed of fine clean yellowish sand quite unlike anything previously noted in the numerous pits and trenches opened upon the Hill, but as unfortunately the trench was only a few feet deep the relation of this fine sand to the London Clay could not then be made out.

Type
Original Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1910

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