Bridgland, D.R. 1994. Quaternary of the Thames. Geological Conservation Review Series No. 7. JNCC, Peterborough, ISBN 0 412 48830 2. The original source material for these web pages has been made available by the JNCC under the Open Government Licence 3.0. Full details in the JNCC Open Data Policy
Chapter 5 Essex
Introduction
Several sites in the extreme south-west of Essex have been described already, in Chapter 4, as they fall within the Lower Thames valley. Pleistocene fluvial deposits are widespread in the remainder of the county and their study has been of great importance in reconstructing the evolution of the Thames drainage system. The succession in Essex comprises not only the deposits of the River Thames (both pre- and post-diversion), but also of its major right-bank tributary, the Medway. A number of more recently formed left-bank Thames tributaries, which now drain the northern part of the county
A large part of Essex is covered by Pleistocene deposits. In addition to fluvial sediments, a widespread covering of till dominates the higher land in the north-western half of the county (
Both the Kesgrave and East Essex Gravel Groups are made up of several component (terrace) gravel formations; High-level and Low-level Subgroups can be recognized within both groups
Research in this area has been less extensive than in the present Thames valley, although the fluvial record in Essex is now acknowledged as critical for reconstructing the development of Thames drainage during the Pleistocene. Prior to the definition of the Kesgrave Sands and Gravels by Rose and Allen (1977; Rose et al., 1976), few authors regarded any of the gravels in Essex outside the Lower Thames valley as products of that river. Because the pre‑ diversion (Kesgrave) Thames gravels are overlain by Lowestoft Till over a wide area
The East Essex Gravels have been variously attributed to marine processes, to the River Medway, to the Thames-Medway, or to glaciofluvial sedimentation (see Part 2 of this chapter). Recent work (Bridgland, 1980, 1983a, 1983b, 1988a) has shown that Medway and Thames-Medway deposits are represented by the High-level East Essex Gravel and Low-level East Essex Gravel Subgroups, respectively. The change from the former to the latter coincided with the diversion of the Thames (by Anglian ice) into its modern valley and, thereby, into the old Medway valley, which was already in existence across eastern Essex. The Low-level East Essex Gravel is represented in GCR sites at Clacton, East Mersea and Southminster.
Relatively little information has come froth the deposits of the more recently formed tributary rivers, those which now have separate estuaries on the North Sea coast. Their deposits have yielded occasional artefacts and fossils, but interglacial sediments have rarely been recorded. However, these rivers provide the only fluvial record of the Late Pleistocene in Essex, as a combination of subsidence of the North Sea Basin and the low base level of the main river during the Late Pleistocene have resulted in Thames deposits of this age being confined, east of London, to the buried channel beneath the modern floodplain (see Chapter 4). The complex GCR site at East Mersea includes the only sediments within the GCR Thames coverage that can be ascribed with any confidence to the Ipswichian Stage (sensu Trafalgar Square); these are the Blackwater deposits described in Part 3 of this chapter, not the complex Thames-Medway sequence at Cudmore Grove, which appears in Part 2. Another Blackwater site, at Great Totham, provides probably the only example of Devensian fossiliferous deposits in the present volume (see, however, Chapter 3, Brimpton).
Central and northern Essex | Eastern Essex | ||
Deposits of local rivers | Deposits of local rivers | ||
Low-level East Essex Gravel Subgroup | East Essex Gravel Group | ||
Anglian glacial deposits | High-level East Essex Gravel Subgroup | ||
Low-level Kesgrave Subgroup | Kesgrave Sands and Gravels Group | ||
High-level Kesgrave Subgroup |