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The climate of the Earth has undergone many changes and for those
times when geologic data are widespread and abundant the Mesozoic
appears to have been one of the warmest intervals. This was a time
during which the single continent Pangea disintegrated into
continental units similar to those of today, a time when there were
no significant polar ice caps and sea level was generally much
higher than at the present time, and a time when dinosaurs
apparently dominated terrestrial faunas and the flowering plants
evolved. Understanding this alien world, ancestral to ours, is
intrinsically interesting, intellectually challenging, and offers
opportunities for more effective targeting of sites where
commercially important geological resources may be found. It also
provides critical insights into the operation of coupled Earth
systems (biospheric, atmospheric, hydrospheric and geospheric)
under extreme 'greenhouse' conditions, and therefore may have
relevance to possible future global change. Our intention in
organizing this Discussion Meeting was to bring together those who
gather and interpret geologic data with those who model global
climates from first principles. The community of workers who study
the Quaternary have made significant advances by integrating and
comparing palaeodata and climate model experiments. Although we
have focused not on the Quaternary 'icehouse' but on the Mesozoic
'hothouse' climate we are well aware that approaches used in the
study of the Quaternary may have relevance to earlier times.
In many countries, saltmarshes represent a diminishing resource
that threatens both natural changes and human activities.
Suggestions that the rate of sea-level rise may accelerate,
combined with a possible increase in mid-latitude storms, have
raised concerns that the rate of saltmarsh loss may also
accelerate, and that existing sea defences may be placed under even
greater pressure. Saltmarshes are of increasing interest to a wide
range of environmental scientists, engineers, conservationists, and
planners concerned with coastal zone management. They are
especially keen to understand the basic physical and biological
processes which govern the formation and development of
saltmarshes. Coastal engineers need to predict the likely effects
on adjacent saltmarshes of abandoned or set-back of sea walls, and
the impact of development schemes such as tidal barrages and
marinas. Seven leading scientists present an overview of the most
important questions including geomorphology, ecology, conservation
and engineering significance.
The climate of the Earth has undergone many changes and for those
times when geologic data are widespread and abundant the Mesozoic
appears to have been one of the warmest intervals. This was a time
during which the single continent Pangea disintegrated into
continental units similar to those of today, a time when there were
no significant polar ice caps and sea level was generally much
higher than at the present time, and a time when dinosaurs
apparently dominated terrestrial faunas and the flowering plants
evolved. Understanding this alien world, ancestral to ours, is
intrinsically interesting, intellectually challenging, and offers
opportunities for more effective targeting of sites where
commercially important geological resources may be found. It also
provides critical insights into the operation of coupled Earth
systems (biospheric, atmospheric, hydrospheric and geospheric)
under extreme 'greenhouse' conditions, and therefore may have
relevance to possible future global change. Our intention in
organizing this Discussion Meeting was to bring together those who
gather and interpret geologic data with those who model global
climates from first principles. The community of workers who study
the Quaternary have made significant advances by integrating and
comparing palaeodata and climate model experiments. Although we
have focused not on the Quaternary 'icehouse' but on the Mesozoic
'hothouse' climate we are well aware that approaches used in the
study of the Quaternary may have relevance to earlier times.
A detailed study of the masonry defences of one England's most
important Roman sites. Erected in c. 270 AD, the masonry walls of
the Roman town of Silchester (Calleva Atrebatum; Hampshire, S.
England) are part of the third system in a series of defensive
works. They stand today to a height of almost 5m and are composed
of up to seven lifts or stages, each consisting of a flint core and
facing (now almost completely robbed away), capped by a
string-course of large blocks and slabs that stretches across the
full width (c. 3m) of the walls, formed of a wide variety of
rock-types foreign to the district.
Between 1801 and the First World War the population of the Borough
of Reading increased almost tenfold, simultaneously with the growth
of new industries. The authorities responded by delineating new
streets and encouraging development in districts springing up
mainly to the east, south and west beyond the original market town.
The Borough's Highways Committee, helped by legislation, played a
major role in managing and guiding these activities, especially in
the later part of the nineteenth century. Large number of bricks
burnt from local clays were used to build houses, shops, schools,
chapels and churches required in these new suburbs, but the making
of the streets called for the procurement of stone from far and
wide. This volume discusses the geological features, spatial
distribution and geographic sources (such as south Oxfordshire,
Wales, Leicestershire and as far away as Norway) of the types of
stone used for road construction in Reading in the late nineteenth
and early twentieth centuries.
The five-hundred year occupation of Insula IX at Silchester has
yielded a sequence of 87 whetstones, mostly tabular but some bar-
or rod-shaped. These are described, illustrated and characterized
with the help of thin-section microscopic petrography. The
whetstones originated in many geological sources, not all of which
can at present be identified. Whetstones from the earliest levels
at Silchester are comparatively local in origin (sarsen, ironstone)
or were made from discarded, imported milling stones (Quartz
Conglomerate, Upper Old Red Sandstone). During the first and second
centuries AD substantial number of bar-shaped whetstones
manufactured in the Wroxeter manner from sandstones in the Weald
Clay Formation (earliest Cretaceous) were imported into Silchester.
Almost all the whetstones of the later Roman period are secondary
in character produced from discarded roofing tiles of Brownstones
(Lower Old Red Sandstone) and Pennant sandstone (later Upper
Carboniferous) imported from the West Country. Small numbers of
whetstones can be traced to the Portland Group (Upper Jurassic) and
to the Lower and Upper Greensand Groups (Lower Cretaceous). The
provision of sharpening stones to Silchester as a whole is
estimated to run into many thousands.
The Anglican church of St. Saviour's and its former parsonage, in
the historic Hampshire parish of Mortimer West End, lie on the
northern shoulder of the valley of the eastward-draining West End
Brook that dissects an extensive plateau underlain by the
Pleistocene Silchester Gravel and the Bagshot and London Clay
Formations (early Tertiary). The sponsor (and effectively the
builder) was Richard Fellowes Benyon of Englefield House,
Englefield in Berkshire, who had in 1854 inherited the Englefield
Estate on the death of his uncle. Designed by the London architect
Richard Armstrong Snr, the church and parsonage were erected over a
20-month period in 1855-6, at a total cost of 3013, of which 473
represents various materials, goods and services provided directly
by the Englefield Estate. There is seating for a mere 80 or so
people, making it one of the most costly churches in the region."
Hampshire (southern England) north of roughly the latitude of
Winchester is dominated geologically by the Upper Cretaceous Chalk
Group and by a substantial outcrop of Tertiary clays and sands
which, forming part of the London Basin, the county shares with
Berkshire to the north. More than 115 churches, by in excess of 60
designers and architects, were rebuilt, built anew and/or
significantly modified in this area between 1750 and the First
World War in response to profound changes in population, sources of
wealth and means of transport and communication. This work looks at
their building materials and decoration.
The late 1860s saw church building on a large and unprecedented
scale in Victorian England, one example of which was the parish
church which forms the basis of this study. Contemporary
documentation relating to the construction of the church has
survived in remarkable fullness allowing J.R.L. Allen to present an
extremely detailed reconstruction of the materials and equipment
used, the funding of the project, the identity of the workmen,
specialist masons and architect involved and their pay and
conditions as well as the provisions made by the local population
to accomodate the construction process.
This volume examines the building materials used in around 200
Berkshire churches dating from Georgian Gothic and Classical
revivals of the turn of the nineteenth century to the Victorian
Gothic rival and the years leading up the the First World War. The
origins of the building materials are also discussed, and combined
with documentary evidence, are used to provide conclusions about
changing transportation and building costs.
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