Benton, M.J. & Spencer, P.S. 1995. Fossil Reptiles of Great Britain. Geological Conservation Review Series No. 10, JNCC, Peterborough, ISBN 0 412 62040 5. 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
Pleistocene
Fossil reptiles from the British Pleistocene are presently known from interglacial sediments of Cromerian, Hoxnian, Ipswichian and Holocene age at a wide variety of localities, owing mainly to the result of a recent programme of research carried out by J.A. Holman in collaboration with A.J. Stuart and other workers during the 1980s and 1990s. The reptiles form part of herpetofaunas which are of value as reliable indicators of Pleistocene climates and environments. The finds also provide a valuable contribution to knowledge on the diversity and spread of reptiles through Pleistocene time, and demonstrate a link with climatic fluctuation. The localities are listed by county, and include only those that have produced reptiles (amphibian-only sites are not listed).
DEVON: Cow Cave, Chudleigh (
SOMERSET: Westbury-sub-Mendip (Cromerian; ?zone Cr IV; ; Emys orbicularis, Coronella austriaca, Natrix natrix, Vipera berus; Stuart, 1979; Holman, 1993).
SUSSEX: Selsey (Ipswichian; zones Ip Ib–IIb; Emys orbicularis; Stuart, 1979); Amey's Eartham Pit, Boxgrove (unnamed interglacial between Cromerian and Anglian;
KENT: Dierden's Pit, Ingress Vale, Swanscombe (Hoxnian; ?zone Ho III;
SUFFOLK: Bobbitshole, Ipswich (Ipswichian; zones Ip Ia–IIa; Emys orbicularis; Stuart, 1979); Stoke Tunnel, Ipswich, Suffolk (Ipswichian; Stoke Tunnel 'Bone Bed', ?zone Ip IV; Emys orbicularis; Stuart, 1979); Harkstead (Ipswichian, ?zones Ip III–IV); Emys orbicularis; Stuart, 1979).
ESSEX: Cudmore Grove, East Mersea, Mersea Island (Hoxnian, Substage Ho HIb, channel fill;
NORFOLK: Mundesley (Ipswichian; 'Forest Bed'; ?= Mundesley Sands, zones Ip Ib–IIb;
LANCASHIRE: Dog Holes, Warton (Flandrian;
None of these sites could be selected as having a greater or lesser claim to be selected as a candidate GCR site to represent British Pleistocene reptiles. Indeed, several have been entirely worked out, and new ones are found when suitable sites are excavated.