Earthwatcher's photos with the keyword: Seatown

Seaweed and light, indigo and gold

09 Apr 2009 193
Seaweed covered boulders at the foot of Ridge Cliff near Seatown, Dorset, England.

Seatown Ridge Cliff

09 Apr 2009 208
Ridge Cliff, east of Seatown in Dorset, is capped by the golden Upper Greensand Formation (Cretaceous). This is in turn underlain by Lower Jurassic strata including the the paler yellow Bridport Sand seen here in the middle of the section. The afternoon sun bathes everything in a golden light which together with the blue sky is intensified by a polarising filter.

Seaweed and green roundness

09 Apr 2009 163
Seaweed covered boulders at the foot of Ridge Cliff near Seatown, Dorset, England.

Golden Boulders and Golden Cap

09 Apr 2009 213
Seaweed covered boulders at the foot of Ridge Cliff near Seatown, Dorset, England. Golden Cap in the background.

Seatown Ridge Cliff and beach

09 Apr 2009 186
Ridge Cliff, east of Seatown in Dorset, is capped by the golden Upper Greensand Formation (Cretaceous). This is in turn underlain by Lower Jurassic strata, including the Eype Clay at the base of the cliff. The latter is quite prone to landslides and mudflows. The afternoon sun bathes everything in a golden light which together with the blue sky is intensified by a polarising filter.

To Seatown and Golden Cap

09 Apr 2009 206
Ridge Cliff, east of Seatown in Dorset, is capped by the golden Upper Greensand Formation (Cretaceous). This is in turn underlain by Lower Jurassic strata, including the Eype Clay at the base of the cliff. The latter is quite prone to landslides and mudflows. Golden Cap, itself capped by Upper Greensand, is visible in the distance. The afternoon sun bathes everything in a golden light which together with the blue sky is intensified by a polarising filter.

Seatown curves

09 Apr 2009 162
The curving shelving shingle beach looking towards Seatown, Dorset.

Boulders with seaweed

09 Apr 2009 151
Seaweed covered boulders at the foot of Ridge Cliff near Seatown, Dorset, England.

Seatown and Golden Cap

09 Apr 2009 284
View towards Golden Cap from Seatown, Dorset. The pale yellow scar in the foreground is probably the Down Cliff Sands (Middle Lias, Lower Jurassic) and is a back scar of the extensive landslipped area to the left mainly in the Lower Lias shales (Eype Clay and Green Ammonite Beds). Golden Cap exposes the Lower and Middle Lias sequence, overlain unconformably at the top by the yellow Upper Greensand (Cretaceous).

Seatown Yellow Ridge

09 Apr 2009 244
Ridge Cliff, east of Seatown in Dorset, is capped by the golden Upper Greensand Formation (Cretaceous). The afternoon sun bathes everything in a golden light which together with the blue sky is intensified by a polarising filter.

Splatter craters

09 Apr 2009 1 219
Not an extraterrestrial planetary surface but craters where pebbles had been thrown into a wet mudflow derived from the Eype Clay (Lower Jurassic). The largest crater is about 8 cm in diameter. On the beach below Ridge Cliff, Seatown, Dorset.

Towards the end of the afternoon

09 Apr 2009 183
Seatown beach and Golden Cap, Dorset, in the late afternoon sunshine. A peaceful place near the end of a glorious early Spring day.

Seatown west cliffs

09 Apr 2009 260
Just west of Seatown, Dorset. Low cliffs of landslipped Lower Lias shales (the 'Green Ammonite Beds', lower Jurassic) with mudflows. The bedding in these cliffs is completely disrupted by the landslides. None of it is in its original place. Golden Cap in the background with its yellow capping of Upper Greensand.

Seatown west cliff landslides and mudflows

09 Apr 2009 235
Just west of Seatown, Dorset. Low cliffs of landslipped Lower Lias shales (the 'Green Ammonite Beds', lower Jurassic) with mudflows. The bedding in these cliffs is completely disrupted by the landslides. None of it is in its original place.

Seatown west cliff mudflow

09 Apr 2009 198
Just west of Seatown, Dorset. Low cliffs of landslipped Lower Lias shales (the 'Green Ammonite Beds', lower Jurassic) with mudflows. The bedding in these cliffs is completely disrupted by the landslides. None of it is in its original place.