It's not often I post three screeds in quick succession! The previous two day's posts and this are on the same subject, so... Why not?
England’s ‘Jurassic Coast’ is rightly famous.
Stretching along the English Channel coastlines of Devon and Dorset, it’s rocks
bear witness to the entire Mesozoic – the Triassic, Jurassic and Cretaceous
Periods (together known as the ‘Age of the Dinosaurs’) from East to West.
That’s a span of 185 million years, in the space between Exmouth in the west to
Old Harry Rocks at Studland Bay, Dorset.
Even if geology isn’t your thing, you’ve seen quite a few
bits of it on film or television – West Bay, Bridport, is the setting for
Broadchurch, Lyme Regis was home to Mary Anning (and of course to Trey),
Kimmeridge Bay is famous for its fossils, Weymouth hosted the maritime events
in the 2012 Olympics, and Lulworth Cove and Durdle Door are rightly famous.
Chesil Beach and the Fleet are very important for their geomorphology and the
lagoonal fauna of the brackish water in the Fleet.
The Isle of Portland, tied to the mainland at the eastern
end of Chesil Beach, is not what you’d call beautiful. It’s been
quarried extensively and it’s a post-industrial landscape rather than a scenic
one. At the southern tip of the island there’s a famous bird
observatory, there’s Pulpit Rock, and because of the island’s southward slope,
under certain conditions there is truly a ferocious tidal race where the land
dives under the sea. It's also where I saw Viper's bugloss and a carline
thistle for the first time; I've enjoyed the times I've visited the island.
Even if you can’t get to the Isle to see it in situ,
Portland Stone - a Jurassic limestone laid down in a warm, shallow sea -
has been used in many places. Christopher Wren chose it for his St
Paul’s Cathedral - mind you, he did have shares in the quarry! Think also
in terms of Buckingham Palace, most of Whitehall, Maritime Greenwich, Regent
Street – and outside London in a huge number of places including Cambridge
University’s Senate House, the Port of Liverpool Building, Baskerville House in
Birmingham, Nottingham’s Council House... You can no doubt add many
locations to this list yourself. It was even exported to New York where it
graces the UN Headquarters. It is so popular with architects and
stonemasons because it is soft enough to work (carve and shape) well but
well-enough cemented to be erosion-resistant. John Maine RA used
Portland Stone to create ‘Sea Strata,’ the exterior and entrances to London’s
Green Park tube station. This looked amazing when it was newly
built, but has sadly become begrimed and will take a lot of work to clean.
The photo at the head of this page is of Roach Stone – the uppermost bed of the Portland Stone series,above the Grove Whitbed (I’ve posted a photo of oyster-rich Grove Whitbed on here previously). Roach stone, instantly recognisable, is full of voids (trace fossils) left where shells have dissolved away; the pointy ones that are so prominent in the photo above are the famous 'Portland Screw’ Aptyxiella portlandica, a gastropod; there are also oysters and Laevitrigonia gibbosa - distinctive trigoniid bivalves - present (right). The latter are sometimes known as ‘Osses heads’ (horses’ heads) because that’s what the organism is are said to have resembled. As to why there are so many fossils of so few species, this may have been down to a period of exceptionally high salinity where these species could thrive but others could not.
Roach stone has rightly taken it's place among Portland
Stone architecture, used on the BBC headquarters in London, the Economist Building in the
same city, the World Conservation and Exhibitions Centre at the British Museum, which boasts an
amazing 1,600 sq. metres of it, the Keynes Building, King's College, University
of Cambridge (right); there are windows, just not in the ground floor at
this end of the building! The blue plaque honours the late, great, Alan
Turing.
In Oxford, several University buildings including the Beehive Building (St John's College) and the ill-designed Blue Boar Quad. It wasn't the Roach that caused the problems, by the way. On the south coast it was used extensively for the Cobb in Lyme Regis and - unsurprisingly, and unsparingly - in Portland's Breakwater. It was also used, along with Whitbed facies stone, in the Verne High Angle Battery, a gun battery that was built in the 19th Century to protect Portland Harbour.
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