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view from Great Bindon - Coneybeare and Buckland monograph low-res image from Lyme Regis Museum scan |
I've mentioned this classic landslip before: Clare and I visited in June 2010 (see Undercliff: visited at last), and I also wrote about its featuring in Sabine Baring-Gould's 1900 novel Winefred, a story of the chalk cliffs (see Seaton, slips and Sabine Baring-Gould).
Nowadays, the terrain is heavily overgrown, and has been described as "the nearest thing Britain has to a jungle". But the local geologists the Rev William Conybeare and Dr William Buckland visited it shortly after it happened, when the geology was fully exposed, and produced "the first fully scientific report ever produced about a major landslip". The report features remarkable sketches of the fresh landslip, what must have been an amazing and terrifying terrain of dissected blocks of wheatfield with chasms between.
In addition, the report features for comparison a sketch of the Hooken Undercliff between Beer and Branscombe, then relatively fresh from the 1790 slip that created it.
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Hooken Undercliff, from Coneybeare and Buckland monograph low-res image from Lyme Regis Museum scan |
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Hooken Undercliff, October 2010 |
Via Lyme Regis Museum blog.
- Ray