Campden Tunnel Gravel Pit

Campden Tunnel Gravel Pit (grid reference SP161408) is a 0.2-hectare (0.49-acre) geological Site of Special Scientific Interest in Gloucestershire, notified in 1988.[1][2] The site is listed in the 'Cotswold District' Local Plan 2001-2011 (on line).[3][4]

Campden Tunnel Gravel Pit
Site of Special Scientific Interest
Location within Gloucestershire
Area of SearchGloucestershire
Grid referenceSP161408
Coordinates52.065791°N 1.765825°W / 52.065791; -1.765825
InterestGeological
Area0.2 hectare
Notification1988
Natural England website

Geology

The site exposes a mixture of gravels, sands and silts which make up the Campden Tunnel Drift (Pleistocene period). These are glacial sediments which fill a deep channel. The melt water is considered to have run from the ice-filled valley of the River Avon (north) to the drainage system of the River Evenlode (south east).[1]

This links with the sequence of glacial deposits in the Midlands and the Upper Thames terraces (Evenlode Valley). The site also links with others in the Moreton-in-Marsh area, for example Stretton-on-Fosse.[1]

Conservation

The site is considered precious so it must only be used for research purposes.[5]

gollark: I have some cool ultra-compact designs, though.
gollark: Besides that, the fusion stuff is very expensive, and we need more power to run automatic mining stuff.
gollark: So it is, silly me.
gollark: Also, U-238 in the plating of some components.
gollark: Fusion needs a lot of startup power.

References

SSSI Source


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