This Walk to Old Harry Rocks Is an Easy Circular Ramble
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Coastal-Management-Policy-In-Purbeck-Jan2021 V1
Coastal Adaption Strategy, January 2021 1 1. Introduction ................................................................................................................... 3 1.1 Coastal Management in Purbeck ....................................................................................... 3 Annual review and priority actions for 2021 ........................................................................... 4 Looking back on 2020… ...................................................................................................................... 4 Priority actions for 2021… ................................................................................................................... 4 2. Background .................................................................................................................... 5 2.1 Shifting Shores .................................................................................................................... 5 2.2 Shoreline Management Plans ............................................................................................ 6 2.3 Climate Change and the Coast ........................................................................................... 7 2.4 Communication and Engagement Strategy ....................................................................... 8 2.5 Coastal Monitoring ............................................................................................................ 8 3. Our strategy for the Purbeck coast ............................................................................... -
Autumn 2009 Free Issue No
Autumn 2009 Free Issue no. 7 no. Issue A mini version of Tower Bridge and a brontosaurus Photo-montage by Tim Heap straddling the water were two of the more tongue-in- be rustic, constructed of timber, appreciably wider with cheek suggestions put to the design team visiting passing places, extended so as to avoid the mud, and to Charmouth on September 10th. Representatives from have an arched elevation similar to the current design. Dorset Engineering Consultancy, the Coastal Ranger team, and the artists, Sans facon, met with District and Parish According to Sans facon, the artists, they do not start from Councillors, adjacent businesses and over 40 locals eager to a preconceived aesthetic: their approach consists of share their thoughts and concerns regarding the understanding a context, from its physical and social replacement footbridge over the Char river. location to the uses and functions of the place. Rather than parachute in ideas or recipes from somewhere else, they People spoke of the natural beauty of the landscape, the aim to utilise and integrate their response ideas within the importance of the geology of the area and the need for a specific quality of the location. The Velator viewing platform new structure that will sit comfortably within its rural they created in Devon (www.sansfacon.co.uk/vel/vel.html) surroundings. The general consensus was that the bridge illustrates this by drawing inspiration from and responding directly to the site and its essence. They will be working in close collaboration with the engineers and the rest of the ‘Palaeontology in Charmouth’ team to develop a joint design. -
Dorset and East Devon Coast for Inclusion in the World Heritage List
Nomination of the Dorset and East Devon Coast for inclusion in the World Heritage List © Dorset County Council 2000 Dorset County Council, Devon County Council and the Dorset Coast Forum June 2000 Published by Dorset County Council on behalf of Dorset County Council, Devon County Council and the Dorset Coast Forum. Publication of this nomination has been supported by English Nature and the Countryside Agency, and has been advised by the Joint Nature Conservation Committee and the British Geological Survey. Maps reproduced from Ordnance Survey maps with the permission of the Controller of HMSO. © Crown Copyright. All rights reserved. Licence Number: LA 076 570. Maps and diagrams reproduced/derived from British Geological Survey material with the permission of the British Geological Survey. © NERC. All rights reserved. Permit Number: IPR/4-2. Design and production by Sillson Communications +44 (0)1929 552233. Cover: Duria antiquior (A more ancient Dorset) by Henry De la Beche, c. 1830. The first published reconstruction of a past environment, based on the Lower Jurassic rocks and fossils of the Dorset and East Devon Coast. © Dorset County Council 2000 In April 1999 the Government announced that the Dorset and East Devon Coast would be one of the twenty-five cultural and natural sites to be included on the United Kingdom’s new Tentative List of sites for future nomination for World Heritage status. Eighteen sites from the United Kingdom and its Overseas Territories have already been inscribed on the World Heritage List, although only two other natural sites within the UK, St Kilda and the Giant’s Causeway, have been granted this status to date. -
Agesalmost As Old As Time Itself, the West Dorset Coastline Tells Many
EXPLORING BRITAIN’ S COASTLINE H ERE MAY BE DAYS when, standing on the beach at TCharmouth, in the shadow of the cliffs behind, with the spray crashing against the shore and the wind whistling past your ears, it is ROCKS OF hard to imagine the place as it was 195 million years ago.The area was Almost as old as time itself, the west a tropical sea back then, teeming with strange and wonderful creatures. It is Dorset coastline tells many stories. a difficult concept to get your head around but the evidence lies around Robert Yarham and photographer Kim your feet and in the crumbling soft mud and clay face of the cliffs. AGES Disturbed by the erosion caused by Sayer uncover just a few of them. the spray and wind, hundreds of small – and very occasionally, large – fossils turn up here.The most common fossils that passers-by can encounter are ammonites (the curly ones), belemnites (the pointy ones); and, rarely, a few rarities surface, such as ABOVE Locals and tourists alike head for the beaches by Charmouth, where today’s catch is a good deal less intimidating than the creatures that swam the local seas millions of years ago. MAIN PICTURE The layers of sand deposited by the ancient oceans can be clearly seen in the great cliffs of Thorncombe Beacon (left) and West Cliff, near Bridport. A37 A35 A352 Bridport A35 Dorchester Charmouth A354 Lyme Regis Golden Cap Abbotsbury Osmington Mills Swannery Ringstead Bay The Fleet Weymouth Chesil Beach Portland Harbour Portland Castle orth S N I L 10 Miles L Isle of Portland O H D I V A The Bill D icthyosaurs or plesiosaurs – huge, cottages attract hordes of summer predatory, fish-like reptiles that swam visitors.They are drawn by the the ancient seas about 200 million picturesque setting and the famous years ago during the Jurassic period. -
Lulworth Cove Circular Via Tyneham and Durdle Door Lulworth Cove Circular – Wool Station Start and Finish
Lulworth Cove Circular via Tyneham and Durdle Door Lulworth Cove Circular – Wool Station Start and Finish 1st walk check 2nd walk check 3rd walk check 1st walk check 2nd walk check 3rd walk check 24th July 2019 Current status Document last updated Tuesday, 27th August 2019 This document and information herein are copyrighted to Saturday Walkers’ Club. If you are interested in printing or displaying any of this material, Saturday Walkers’ Club grants permission to use, copy, and distribute this document delivered from this World Wide Web server with the following conditions: • The document will not be edited or abridged, and the material will be produced exactly as it appears. Modification of the material or use of it for any other purpose is a violation of our copyright and other proprietary rights. • Reproduction of this document is for free distribution and will not be sold. • This permission is granted for a one-time distribution. • All copies, links, or pages of the documents must carry the following copyright notice and this permission notice: Saturday Walkers’ Club, Copyright © 2008-2019, used with permission. All rights reserved. www.walkingclub.org.uk This walk has been checked as noted above, however the publisher cannot accept responsibility for any problems encountered by readers. Lulworth Cove Circular via Tyneham and Durdle Door Start & Finish: Lulworth Cove bus stop Lulworth Cove bus stop, map reference SY 822 800, is 178 km south west of Charing Cross, 16m above sea level and in Dorset. Length: 22.2 km (13.8 mi). Cumulative ascent/descent: 974m. For a shorter walk and an Alternative Start or Finish at Wool Station, see below Walk options. -
The Eastbury Hotel & Spa Walking Guide
The Eastbury Hotel & Spa Walking Guide www.theeastburyhotel.co.uk 01935 813131 [email protected] CONTENT Walk Number Page (s) With 26 bespoke bedrooms and suites and 3 bedroom Eastbury Cottage, a 2AA award-winning Restaurant, boutique Spa Area Map 4, 5 and beautiful walled gardens in the glorious countryside of Dorset, 1 Our Favourite Walk 6, 7 The Eastbury Hotel offers escapism in true British fashion. Lovely views, woods and rolling meadows & countryside Approximately 2 hours 15 mins As the hotel is surrounded by National Trust and 2 Raleigh’s Country Retreat at Sherborne 8, 9 English Heritage Sites it’s a great base from which to explore the A gentle circuit around Sherborne Dorset coast - Chesil Beach, Durdle Door, West Bay and Brownsea 6.4 miles Island (to name but a few) are all under a 45 minute drive. 3 The Diaries of Marnhull 10, 11 4 miles Here is our pick of some of the best walks to showcase 4 In the Doghouse at Purse Caundle 12, 13 the breath taking countryside. 5 miles 5 South West Coastal Path 14, 15 (Part of the Jurassic Coast), Chideock to Charmouth, 5.4 miles 6 Folke & Sherborne Park 16, 17 7.5 miles 7 Studland Bay, Old Harry Rocks Walk 18,19 3.5 miles ‘Life is like riding a bicycle. 8 Badbury Rings & High Wood, Kingston 20, 21 Lacy Walk To keep your balance you must keep moving’ 3.1 miles Albert Einstein 9 Glastonbury Tor 22, 23 3.2 miles All walks can also be found on our website www.theeastburyhotel.co.uk Dog friendly The Eastbury Hotel & Spa Walking Guide 3 Area Map 9 3 1 2 4 6 8 CHALMOUTH 5 5 A35 7 1 Our Favourite Walk 6 Folke & Sherborne Park 2 Raleigh’s Country Retreat at Sherborne 7 Studland Bay, Old Harry Rocks Walk 3 The Diaries of Marnhull 8 Badbury Rings & High Wood, Kingston Lacy Walk 4 In the Doghouse at Purse Caundle 9 Glastonbury Tor 5 South West Coastal Path The Eastbury Hotel & Spa Walking Guide 5 Walk Our Favourite Walk LOVELY VIEWS, WOODS AND ROLLING MEADOWS 1 & COUNTRYSIDE The walk is approximately 2 hours 15 minutes Continue along this lane until you can see another church in front of you. -
The National Trust February 2019
Shell Bay, Studland The National Trust February 2019 1 Contents 1. Introduction ................................................................................................................. 3 2. Background .................................................................................................................. 4 2.1 Shifting Shores .................................................................................................................. 4 2.2 Shoreline Management Plans .......................................................................................... 5 2.3 Climate Change and the Coast ............................................................................................. 6 2.4 Communication and Engagement Strategy ...................................................................... 7 2.5 Coastal Monitoring ........................................................................................................... 7 3. Coastal Management Policy Description ........................................................................ 8 3.1 Middlebere Peninsula .................................................................................................... 10 3.2 Brands Bay and Bramble Bush Bay ................................................................................. 12 3.3 South Haven Point .......................................................................................................... 13 3.4 Shell Bay ........................................................................................................................ -
Old Harry Rocks Lulworth Cove
The Geological Timeline --> 250 million years ago The Triassic Period 200 million years ago The Jurassic Period 145 million years ago The Cretaceous Period 65 million years ago BUS 56B BUS 56B BUS X53 2 Bus Frequency Monday to Friday Saturday Sunday BUS 885 BUS 157 2 Service Route [showing approximate journey time between places] Daytime Evening Daytime Evening Daytime Evening BUS 56B EAST DEVON 26 BUS X31 BUS X31 Visitor Centre Boat Trips BUS Youth X53 HostelBUS BUSX53 X53 X53 Jurassic Coast Bus Route BUS X53 Association 5* Swanage [14 minutes] Durlston Country Park 2 per hour … 2 per hour … 2 per hour … BUS 52B Colyton Tourist Information National Trust BUS 157 BUS 33BUS157 157 National Cycle Network Route (Open) BUS 56/B Centre BUS 40 Every 12 1 per Every 15 1 per Museum Viewpoint (Please note, some 2 National Cycle Network Route (Proposed) 10 Weymouth [30 minutes] Dorchester 1 per hour … Seaton viewpoints can only be reached on foot) minutes hour minutes hour Tramway Railway Station South West Coast33 Path 33 332 Triassic Rocks Jurassic Rocks Cretaceous Rocks BUS 50 Axminster [26 minutes] Lyme Regis [39 minutes] 1 1 1 National Trail X31 1 per hour 1 per hour 1 per hour [54 minutes] journey journey journey BUS X31 2 2 2 (2¼hrs) Bridport Dorchester BUS 52A BUS X31 London WEST DORSET 2 2 2 Swanage [21 minutes] Corfe Castle [16 minutes] 2 2 2 BUS 52A/B 2 40 1 per hour 1 per hour 1 per hour South West 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 km Wareham [33 minutes] Poole journeys journeys journeys Coast Path 2 Sidford BUS 103 2 BUS X53 BUS 899 Bovington0 1 2 3 4 5 miles [23 minutes] [35 minutes] London (2¾hrs) Camp BUS 104 Dorchester† Weymouth BUS X53 0 12 2 3 0 4 10 5 21 6 32 7 43 85 4 9 65 1076 km 87 98 109 km10 km X43* Durdle Door [6 minutes] Lulworth Cove [19 minutes] 4 journeys … 4 journeys … 4 journeys … BUS 57 BUS 157 Seaton Jurassic (opening 2016) BUS 10 Wool [14 minutes] Wareham [29 minutes] Swanage BUS 103 0 1 20 0 31 1 42 2 53 miles3 4 4 5 miles5 miles Fine Foundation BUS X43 BUS 157 Centre Beer WEST DORSET 44 Swanage [22 minutes] Worth Matravers 2 journeys … .. -
The Geology Durdle Door, Dorset Chalk Stratigraphy, Sedimentology and Tectonic Structure New Marker Beds
Wessex OUGS Field Guide to Durdle Door, Dorset, May 2018 The Geology Durdle Door, Dorset Chalk stratigraphy, sedimentology and tectonic structure New marker beds Durdle Cove, Dorset looking west over Scratchy Bottom and Swyre Head to Bat’s Head. The line of caves at the foot of the cliff in Durdle Cove is formed on the Durdle Cove Thrust (see also Rowe 1901, Plate III, pp. 16-17). Open University Geological Society Wessex Group Field Excursion Sunday 13th May 2018 Leaders: Rory Mortimore and Jeremy Cranmer Field guide prepared by Rory Mortimore www.chalkrock.com Based on the paper Late Cretaceous stratigraphy, sediments and structure: gems of the Jurassic Coast of Devon and Dorset, England just going into press in the Proceedings of the Geologists’ Association, 2018. 1 Wessex OUGS Field Guide to Durdle Door, Dorset, May 2018 Wessex OUGS Field Trip Durdle Door, Durdle Cove, Scratchy Bottom and Bat’s Head Late Cretaceous stratigraphy, sediments and structure: gems of the Jurassic Coast of Devon and Dorset, England Introduction Extraordinary, long-distance litho-marker beds such as the Lewes and Shoreham Tubular Flints and associated marl seams and fossils (Fig.2), recognised in cliff exposures and cliff-fall boulders, are keys to unlocking the stratigraphy and tectonic structures in the Late Cretaceous (Fig.1) of the Jurassic Heritage Coast. Durdle Cove is a special gem exposing the Lewes and Seaford Chalk stratigraphy where these and new marker beds are identified and where sediments and tectonic structures provide clues to timing of movements that produced a Late Cretaceous pericline which grew into a Miocene monocline along the line of the underlying Purbeck Reverse Fault. -
Navitus Bay Wind Park
NAVITUS BAY WIND PARK ENVIRONMENTAL STATEMENT NON-TECHNICAL SUMMARY DOCUMENT 6.3 APRIL 2014 Pursuant to Regulation 5(2)(a) of the Infrastructure Planning (Applications: Prescribed Forms and Procedure) Regulations 2009 Version 1.0 navitusbaywindpark.co.uk DOCUMENT CONTROL DOCUMENT PROPERTIES Author Navitus Bay Development Limited Title Non-Technical Summary Document Reference 6.3 VERSION HISTORY DATE VERSION STATUS DESCRIPTION/CHANGES 10 April 2014 1.0 Final Issued for application submission This document has been prepared to provide information in respect of the proposed Navitus Bay Wind Park and for no other purpose. In preparation of this document Navitus Bay Development Limited and their subcontractors have made reasonable efforts to ensure that the content is accurate, up to date and complete for the purpose for which it has been prepared. Other than any liability detailed in the contracts between the parties for this work neither Navitus Bay Development Limited or their subcontractors shall have any liability for any loss, damage, injury, claim, expense, cost or other consequence arising as a result of use or reliance upon any information contained in or omitted from this document. © Copyright Navitus Bay Development Limited 2014 2 CONTENTS 1 INTRODUCTION 4 2 LEGISLATION AND POLICY 6 3 CONSULTATION 8 4 ALTERNATIVES AND SITE SELECTION 10 5 PROJECT DESCRIPTION 14 6 ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT ASSESSMENT 22 (EIA) METHODOLOGY 7 OFFSHORE IMPACT ASSESSMENT 27 8 ONSHORE IMPACT ASSESSMENT 46 9 PROJECT WIDE IMPACT ASSESSMENT 56 10 CONTACT INFORMATION 61 3 1 INTRODUCTION 1.1 PURPOSE 1.2 THE APPLICANT 1.1.1 The proposed Navitus Bay Wind Park (the Project) 1.2.1 Navitus Bay Development Limited (NBDL) is a is an offshore wind farm of up to 970 megawatts British company registered in the UK formed (MW) of generating capacity located west of the following a joint venture between Eneco and Isle of Wight in the English Channel. -
Tyneham Dec 2013
DESTINATIONS Location name DESTINATIONS Locationq THE LOST nameWORLD This spectacular section of the Jurassic Coast was closed to the public for 32 years, but visitors can now glimpse its rare beauty during weekends and public holidays. D-Day in Dorset Seventy years ago, the 225 inhabitants of Tyneham in south Dorset packed their bags and left, never to return. Today, only the abandoned landscape is left to tell the story… 40 COUNTRY WALKING DECEMBER 2013 D-DAY IN DORSET Tyneham HEY WOULD LIKE you to But Tyneham is more than a war u LAND WORTH believe that it doesn’t exist. memorial; it’s a vision of what England FIGHTING FOR There are no road signs, no would look like without us. The village and When rested from tourist leaflets and only its surrounding countryside were entirely armoured vehicles and heavy artillery, perseverance and cunning will closed to civilians for more than 30 years the tracks and paths Tlead you to their official web page. And yet, until in 1975, after years of protest from out of Tyneham make for spectaculr walking every weekend, dozens of cars and locals and prominent Open Spaces Society country. Here, the white minibuses pile into the car park, undeterred. campaigner, Rodney Legg, the government cliffs of Mupe Bay rise They’re here to see the crumbling stone finally began to open up dedicated trails to behind Worbarrow. houses and time warp church, and to the public. explore the neglected footpaths which soar Today, visitors are allowed into the in solitude over Purbeck ridgelines and range on weekends and public holidays, chalk cliffs. -
Dorset Coast Thomas Hardy Walks Holiday
Dorset Coast Thomas Hardy Walks Holiday Destinations: Dorset Coast & England Trip code: LHTHY-4 Trip Walking Grade: 3 HOLIDAY OVERVIEW Thomas Hardy understood, knew, and was loyal to Dorset, the countryside where he was born and lived most of his life. Dorset’s wild uplands and quiet villages, tucked away beneath the Downs, have changed very little since Hardy’s day. We walk through Hardy’s landscapes and see it much as he would have seen it, and the paths we take are the ancient byways followed for generations by people going about their ways. These are the paths Thomas Hardy walked and the characters in his novels trod. An exploration on foot of Hardy’s ‘Wessex’ is surely one of the best ways of discovering Hardy’s land and work. WHAT'S INCLUDED • Great value: all prices include Full Board en-suite accommodation, a full programme of walks with all transport to and from the walks, plus evening activities • Great walking: explore Hardy's Wessex in the company of our experienced leader • Accommodation: our Country House is equipped with all the essentials – a welcoming and relaxing lounge and dining area, a drying room for your boots and kit, and comfortable en-suite rooms www.hfholidays.co.uk PAGE 1 [email protected] Tel: +44(0) 20 3974 8865 HOLIDAYS HIGHLIGHTS • Discover the beautiful homeland of Thomas Hardy and the landscapes that inspired him • Walks explore Hardy’s Wessex and his inspiration for novels such as Far from the Madding Crowd, Tess of the D’Urbervilles, The Woodlanders • Admire the scenes of Hardy’s Egdon Heath, Mistover Knap, Rainbarrow, Mellstock, and Abbot’s Cernal • Follow in the footsteps of Hardy’s characters such as Tess of the D’Urbervilles.