Farrant, A R. 2008.A walkers’ guide to the geology and landscape of eastern Mendip. Book and map at 1:25 000 scale. (Keyworth, Nottingham: British Geological Survey.) This guide is available to purchase from the British Geological Survey https://shop.bgs.ac.uk/Shop/Product/BSP_BEMEND
Mells and the Wadbury Valley
Limited on-road parking is available in Mells and Great Elm.
The Mells area and in particular the deeply incised Wadbury Valley to the south-east displays some fascinating geology and industrial archaeology. Mells [6]
From Mells, the most spectacular geology can be seen on a walk down the Wadbury Valley [7]
On the bend of the river [8]
On the opposite side of the river is a curious pile of boulders from which water sometimes pours [9]
Just downsteam, opposite the outfall of the old mill race at river level is the Mells River Sink [10]
Running up the hill behind the sink is a curious open rift [11]
There have been at least eight water wheels on the site, powering the tilt hammers and grinding machinery. The water was fed through a complex series of stone-lined tunnels to emerge at a tail race 250 m farther down valley. The stone buildings, and the labyrinth of flues and tunnels are now home to a large roost of greater and lesser horseshoe bats. These rare bats are relatively widespread in Mendip caves and mines, and, unlike other British bats, can easily be recognised by their free-hanging roosting habit.
Mosses, liverworts and small wall ferns thrive in the diffused light and high humidity of the ruins. Brittle bladder-fern is found here close to the southernmost edge of its British range, whilst the diminutive wall-rue and curious rusty-back can be found anchored in the mortar of the walls.
The narrow valley is densely wooded, and interesting herbs that can be found near the old iron works including stinking hellebore and, in boggy ground, the creeping alternate-leaved golden saxifrage with its masses of attractive yellow flowers in springtime. Limestone boulders on the steep valley sides support great masses of moss, especially Thamnobryum alopecurum and Anomodon viticulosus, and hart’s-tongue is abundant on the ground, with its glossy, strap-like leaves. Dippers and kingfishers are frequent users of the stream, feeding on small fish and invertebrates.
A kilometre downstream on the southernmost point of a big bend, a small, but prominent cave entrance can be seen up on the south bank. This is Spleenwort Shelter [13]
Continuing down-valley leads to Vallis Vale. Turning south-west, up Fordbury Bottom, the railway line to Whatley Quarry emerges from a tunnel. Following the path next to the stream leads to Tedbury Camp Quarry [15]
This quarry admirably exposes the angular unconformity between the steeply dipping, massively bedded, grey Carboniferous Clifton Down Limestone and the overlying horizontally bedded, yellow Jurassic Inferior Oolite limestone (see inset box p17). A large flat area of rock has been exposed where the Inferior Oolite has been stripped away to reveal the underlying Carboniferous Limestone in preparation for blasting.
This surface was once the sea floor in Jurassic times. A close examination of the unconformity surface shows that it has been encrusted with fossil oysters and the underlying Carboniferous Limestone has been bored by worms (Trypanities) and bivalves. This can be seen most clearly at the edge of unconformity surface. Worm borings several centimetres long occur in the grey Carboniferous Limestone and are infilled with yellow Jurassic sediment. Here the Clifton Down
Limestone dips at about 40° to the north. Beds of oolitic, shelly and muddy limestone, some with chert nodules, can be seen. Fossil corals (Lithostrotion), brachiopods and algal stromatolites occur at some horizons. The overlying Inferior Oolite is up to 7 m thick and is very fossiliferous. Many brachiopods, gastropods, bivalves and echinoids (sea urchins) can be found in the lower beds. If you look carefully at the rock, you can see lots of small rounded grains of calcium carbonate known as ooliths. These were formed in a shallow tropical sea about 180 million years ago. This cap of Inferior Oolite extends westwards to Whatley Quarry where it has been stripped off in order to work the underlying Carboniferous Limestone.