Dundry Hill: Difference between revisions
Created page with "{{Infobox hill |name = Dundry Hill |county=Somerset |picture = Geograph 2141776 Dundry trig point and church.jpg |picture caption = The trig point at the top of Dundry Hill<br..." |
No edit summary |
||
Line 5: | Line 5: | ||
|picture caption = The trig point at the top of Dundry Hill<br />with the top of the tower of Church of St Michael in the background | |picture caption = The trig point at the top of Dundry Hill<br />with the top of the tower of Church of St Michael in the background | ||
|height=764 ft | |height=764 ft | ||
|range=Mendip Hills | |||
|range =Mendip Hills | |||
|os grid ref= ST553667 | |os grid ref= ST553667 | ||
|latitude=51.39756 | |latitude=51.39756 | ||
Line 23: | Line 22: | ||
{{reflist}} | {{reflist}} | ||
== | == Outside links == | ||
* [http://dhg.mvcg.org.uk/ Dundry Hill Group] | * [http://dhg.mvcg.org.uk/ Dundry Hill Group] |
Latest revision as of 12:40, 2 August 2018
Dundry Hill | |||
Somerset | |||
---|---|---|---|
The trig point at the top of Dundry Hill with the top of the tower of Church of St Michael in the background | |||
Range: | Mendip Hills | ||
Summit: | 764 ft ST553667 51°23’51"N, 2°38’38"W |
Dundry Hill is a hill in Somerset, immediately south of Bristol: it includes farmland, a small number of houses and a church. It stretches east-west for some two miles.
The village of Dundry, with its prominent church, is near the summit. At the eastern end is Maes Knoll, near Norton Malreward, an Iron Age hillfort and the start of Wansdyke.[1] To the South lies the Chew Valley.
On the western side of the hill is a spring which becomes the Land Yeo.
Dundry Main Road South Quarry is a 1¾-acre geological Site of Special Scientific Interest near the village of East Dundry, because of the number of fossils in the inferior oolite. The Main Road Quarry exposes a fine section in the Middle and Upper Inferior Oolite,[2] with the rocks lying stratigraphically below them visible at Barns Batch Spinney. The former characterised by a typically southern English-Normandy fauna, including the rich ammonite occurrences of the "Brown iron-shot", and the latter by contrasting faunas of Cotswold aspect. This contrast is direct evidence for movements of the Mendip Axis in Middle Jurassic times, making this an outstanding site for its bearing on studies of palaeogeography.[3]
References
- ↑ "Maes Knoll". Wansdyke Project. http://www.wansdyke21.org.uk/wansdyke/wanwesteast/wanwest1.htm. Retrieved 2009-03-27.
- ↑ Haslett, Simon K. (2010). Somerset Landscapes: Geology and landforms. Usk: Blackbarn Books. pp. 92-96. ISBN 9781456416317.
- ↑ "Dundry Main Road South Quarry". English Nature. http://www.english-nature.org.uk/citation/citation_photo/1002681.pdf. Retrieved 2006-07-10.