Ambrose, K, Carney, J N, Lott, G K, Weightman, G, And McGrath, A. 2007. Exploring the landscape of Charnwood Forest and Mountsorrel. A walkers’ guide to the rocks and landscape of Charnwood Forest and Mountsorrel. Keyworth, Nottingham: British Geological Survey. The guide is available to purchase from the British Geological Survey https://shop.bgs.ac.uk/Shop/Product/BSP_CHARNWOOD
Walk 3: Cademan Wood and Grace Dieu
rocks formed close to a volcano, and a Carboniferous Limestone exposure
Ascent: about 40m
Distance: 6km
Difficulty: fairly easy on good path
Start: grid reference
This walk visits spectacular rocks that formed very close (proximal) to a Charnian volcano. It mostly takes place within dense, mature woodland so take a compass or GPS — if lost, stay within the wood and keep crossing it from side to side until you regain the main footpath. From the left corner of the small car park off Swannymote Road enter the wood and bear gradually right, ascending towards the summit of High Cademan (1)
the rocks become rough-surfaced and are made up of volcanic fragments; they are composed of tuffs belonging to the Charnwood Lodge Volcanic Formation. Descend westwards to the base of High Cademan; this part of the walk is a steep scramble and care is needed. Bear right to join the main path westwards through the wood. After a few minutes this path forks at a small exposure of andesite. Keep straight on (i.e. bear right) and follow the main path, eventually crossing a clearing before re-entering the wood just south of Broad Hill.
Now look for a smaller path bearing immediately right (northwards) up the small knoll of Broad Hill. If you examine the rocks closely, you can see exposures of very coarse (lapilli) tuff, andesite and volcanic breccia (2)
Return to the main path to continue northwards to Calvary Rock. Look closely at the moss and lichen-covered crags there; volcanic breccias are seen in abundance, and may be ancient examples of pyroclastic block flows, formed when andesitic domes explode or collapse to form ‘hot avalanches’ of volcanic material that descend the volcano flanks (see also, page 4 and Walk 4).
Limited vergeside parking on Warren Lane (5)
Keep going north-north-west along the main path (many other volcanic breccia exposures can be explored in the wood to the east), to the Grace Dieu Brook (6)
At (9) the path passes under a disused railway embankment. Do not go through, but instead scramble up to the left (west) of the brick-built bridge and turn right. Walk along the embankment, counting 110 paces, to find on the left a well-defined track descending the embankment into the disused Grace Dieu limestone quarry
These strata are from an early part of the Carboniferous Period. you can find shells of the large brachiopod Gigantoproductus together with crinoids.
Former exposures here showed limestones with Charnian pebbles, suggesting that Charnwood Forest was land that was being eroded at the start of the carboniferous Period. Returning to the Grace Dieu Trail, you can walk north-eastwards, passing beneath a disused viaduct, to visit Grace Dieu Priory. This is an Augustinian nunnery dating from about AD 1235. There are Charnian rocks in the walls (Page 42), some of which are of Peldar Dacite Breccia (see Walk 9), probably from medieval workings in the area now occupied by Whitwick Quarry, 2.5km to the south.