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~ a celebration of nature

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Tag Archives: chalk cliffs

Wild words: chalk

21 Wednesday Feb 2018

Posted by sconzani in geology, nature, seaside

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Tags

#WildWords, Birling Gap, chalk, chalk cliffs, Cuckmere Haven, limestone cliffs, Seven Sisters Country Park

Chalk: noun; ‘a white soft earthy limestone (calcium carbonate) formed from the skeletal remains of sea creatures’, according to the Oxford Dictionary, though that seems a relatively simplistic explanation to me. I chose chalk as this week’s word as I was in East Sussex last week and had occasion twice to see the magnificent chalk cliffs known as the Seven Sisters, once at Birling Gap in a howling gale and again, at Cuckmere Haven, on a day that felt like summer had come early to southern England.

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The Discovering Fossils website has this to say about the chalk at the Seven Sisters:

The Chalk at Seven Sisters belongs to the Upper Chalk, and was deposited during the Coniacian and Santonian stages of the Late Cretaceous epoch between 87-84 million years ago (mya). At this time Seven Sisters and much of Great Britain, along with Europe, lay beneath a relatively shallow sea around 40°N of the equator, on an equivalent latitude to the Mediterranean Sea today.

And you can read more about the fascinating process of chalk formation here.

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The chalk cliffs of the Seven Sisters

23 Tuesday May 2017

Posted by sconzani in geology, nature

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

chalk, chalk cliffs, Seven Sisters, Seven Sisters Country Park

The white cliffs of Dover get all the publicity but, personally, I prefer the magnificent chalk cliffs of the Seven Sisters, near Eastbourne.

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It seems unbelievable to me that the chalk is actually the microscopic remains of plankton deposited here as much as 90 million years ago, and that the darker bands, of flint, were probably formed from the remains of sponges during those times when sponges were particularly abundant in the warm seas that once flowed here.

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My photos were taken on two visits and from both directions (east to west, west to east), and you can see how different the cliffs look in different weather conditions. They sparkle and glisten in bright sunshine and smoulder like burnished steel on grey days.

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The chalk is soft, erodes constantly and there are frequent large slips (as you can see in the photo below) so, if you’re visiting, stay away from the cliff edge!

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A lunchtime fossick at Cuckmere Haven

22 Monday May 2017

Posted by sconzani in coastal fauna, nature

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Tags

British coastal fauna, chalk cliffs, Cuckmere Haven, Cuttlefish bone, limpet shell, Mermaid's purse, Seven Sisters Country Park, shingle beach, Whelk egg cases, whelk shells

170522 Cuckmere Haaven 7 sisters

To me, this is one of the most beautiful views in the world so what better place to sit and enjoy a picnic lunch after our wildlife walk around Seaford Head.

170522 Cuckmere Haven Whelk egg cases
170522 Cuckmere Haven Mermaid-s-purse

And, of course, I couldn’t resist a little fossick to see what the sea had washed in. Jill found the first Mermaid’s purse, one of the leathery brown-black egg cases of rays and sharks, then I found two more. The cream-coloured egg cases of Whelks were scattered all around, and Jill also discovered a sizeable chunk of Cuttlefish bone. Empty seashells lay everywhere amongst the shingle and flint, with limpets and whelks the most numerous. But then my eyes were drawn back to just soaking in the views of the incredible chalk cliffs of the Seven Sisters.

170522 Cuckmere Haven sea fauna

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Seven Sisters Country Park

16 Tuesday Aug 2016

Posted by sconzani in birds, insects, nature, parks, wildflowers

≈ 8 Comments

Tags

birding, birdwatching, British birds, chalk cliffs, Cuckmere River, East Sussex, Seven Sisters Country Park

Last Wednesday Jill and I walked the full length of the Seven Sisters Country Park in East Sussex twice, down to the sea and back on one side of the river, followed by a break for a delicious lunch at the Cuckoo Inn, and then down to the sea and back on the other side of the river.

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We did the same walk on 13 August 2014 and it was top of my list to do again on this visit. Rather than the cloudless, bright blue sky of two years ago, this time it was quite overcast though no less beautiful as the clouds lent a different atmosphere to the landscape, creating a more moody feel that I almost prefer.

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The huge chalk cliffs were just as awe-inspiring, the cliff tops were covered with luxuriant wildflower growth, and we delighted in sightings of birds and insects. It was a magical day!

To walk the landscapes of the Seven Sisters Country Park, check out my Sconzani blog posts: this was on a blue-sky day in 2014 and this was last week.

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About me

sconzani

sconzani

I'm a writer and photographer; researcher and blogger; birder and nature lover; countryside rambler and city strider; volunteer and biodiversity recorder.

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