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
Beacon Hill
Limited parking is available along the roadside on Beacon Hill.
Beacon Hill [60]
Beacon Hill is a pericline with Devonian Portishead Formation and older Silurian volcanic rocks (Coalbrookdale Formation) outcropping in the core and forming the elongate ridge stretching from Maesbury east to Cranmore Tower and Downhead. Carboniferous Limestone flanks both sides of the pericline, and is locally buried beneath younger rocks.
At the top of Beacon Hill is a narrow strip of woodland [60]
The Portishead Formation is visible at several small outcrops in the woods. The rocks consist of a sequence of conglomerates and sandstones. The conglomerates contain far-travelled, well- rounded quartz pebbles with some rhyolite lava and granite pebbles set in a red-coloured sand matrix. These are overlain by red sandstones. The sandstone from this site was quarried and used at nearby Roman sites.
To the south, the Fosse Way descends steeply down the hill. South of the wood, there is a prominent break of slope, which marks the margin of the Lower Jurassic Downside Stone outcrop. This rock is draped over the older Carboniferous and Devonian rocks, and forms a gently sloping plateau between here and Shepton Mallet. To the east, the Silurian volcanic rocks outcrop along the ridge.
They consist of andesite and rhyodacite lavas, tuffs (consolidated volcanic ash) and agglomerate (volcanic conglomerate) sandwiched between ash-rich, fossiliferous siltstone and mudstone. These rocks are the remains of an ancient volcano that erupted into a shallow sea around 425 million years ago. They are the oldest rocks in the Mendips, and are the most southerly outcrop of Silurian strata in Britain. Fragments and pebbles of these rocks can be seen in ploughed fields and stone walls across the outcrop.
Silurian rocks have been quarried at Moon’s Hill Quarry, south of Stoke St Michael [61]
The East Mendip Study Centre, an educational centre for school groups run by a consortium of local quarry companies is planned to be based here. The volcanic rocks were also quarried just south of Tadhill.
Just over a kilometre south of Moon’s Hill Quarry is the disused Waterlip Quarry [62]
To the south-east of Stoke St Michael lies Cranmore Tower [63]
From here there is a good view of the surrounding region and the underlying rock spans over 300 million years of geological history. In the foreground is the Torr Works quarry, excavated in Carboniferous Limestone. To the south-east, beyond the clay lowlands is the wooded Postlebury Hill, an outlier of the Cretaceous Upper Greensand, which also forms the escarpment beyond.
To the east is the conspicuous knoll of Cley Hill, topped by an Iron Age fort. This is an outlier of Upper Cretaceous Chalk, with the main Chalk mass of Salisbury Plain beyond. To the north-east, the Westbury White Horse sits just east of the conspicuous chimney of the Westbury Cement Works.