Aber
Geology Group - Lyme Regis Trip 2009
in association with

Friday 18th to Sunday 20th September 2009
IMPORTANT
- PLEASE INFORM RICHARD BULL WHEN YOU HAVE MADE A BOOKING WITH
YOUR HOTEL OR BED AND BREAKFAST
Leaders
Richard & Barbara Bull, Redcroft, Venlake End, Uplyme,
Lyme Regis DT7 3SF
Tel 01297 445447, email: richardbull -at-
supanet.com, mob: Richard 07933 796359
(to send an email please replace -at-
with @)
HQ
Royal Lion Hotel (30 rooms - 2 stars privately owned)
Broad St, Lyme Regis (www.royallionhotel.com)
tel 01297 445622.
(at 2008 prices 2-day Royal Break (D, B&B) £130, 3-day
£186, dogs £5/night).
Book
direct with the Hotel mentioning Richard Bull's Aberystwyth group.
Note
that there is a £40 booking deposit. Early bookings would
be helpful to keep the Hotel from filling up with others! If you
need a quiet room, ask not to be on the Broad Street frontage.
Other
hotels/b&b are available in Lyme but all very small by Llandrindod
standards!
Alexandra,
Pound St 01297 442010 (good, more expensive, has very tight car
park)
Bay Suites, Marine Parade 01297 442059 (on the prom with
private car park elsewhere in the town - but no car access to
hotel except for loading - Tai food)
Mariners, Silver St 01297 442753. Recently refurbished
All are recommended and all have web sites which are easily Googled.
There
are many b&bs, but I do not know anything about their merits,
but details can be had from Lyme Regis Tourist Information Centre
tel 01297 442138
e-mail: lymeregis.tic -at- westdorset.gov.uk
(replace -at- with @
to send an email)
www.lymeregistourismco.uk
and www.westdorset.com
Lyme
Bay Holidays 01297 443363 are agents for a range of self-catering
accommodation in the town and surrounding countryside and would
send a brochure on request.
This
chosen hotel is central, takes dogs, has a swimming pool and a
secured car park and is part of the history of Lyme. Being an
historic coaching inn, it would have been frequented by all the
important people from Lyme's history, no doubt including the likes
of Buckland, Conybeare, de la Beche (who lived a few doors up),
Jane Austen and more recently, John Fowles.
Getting
There
Travel
to Lyme Regis by public transport is relatively easy from London
- take SW Trains from Waterloo to Axminster via Woking (for Heathrow
coach connection), Salisbury (roughly every two hours, with some
extras) and get the connecting (hourly even on Sundays) 31 bus
to Lyme, which stops in Broad Street. You can book through including
the bus journey, so they say. In reverse, the same 31 bus connects
at Dorchester with half-hourly SW Trains from Bournemouth, Woking,
Southampton and London, but with a much longer bus ride. On Friday
evenings seat reservations on the trains are recommended.
The
best approach from London is by the M3/A303, not via the Southampton
- Bournemouth conurbation. Even so, the A303 has some single carriageway
sections and there is usually a queue at the end of each dual
section.
Maybe
your journey won't be as interesting as the Geologists' Association
in 1889, before the Axminster & Lyme Regis Light Railway was
opened in 1903 (closed by Dr Beeching!)

Provisional
Timetable
Friday:
Gather
7pm for dinner. Briefing after dinner in hotel
Saturday:
(low tide 13.00 BST, 0.4m, high tide 20.02, 4.6m)
09.00
Gather at Lyme Regis Museum (£3) and meet museum geologist
and Lyme fossil collector Paddy Howe for view of collections including
recent reptile finds. I will give a brief talk on the giants of
geology who came from Lyme (and Axminster) and who formed a co-operative
group in the early C18th: Professor William Buckland, Sir Henry
de la Beche, Mary Anning and Dean William Daniel Conybeare. Coffee
will be served at the Museum, before walking west towards Pinhay
Bay fossiliferous Blue Lias and the White Lias - the T/J boundary.
Problems
to consider:
·
The origin of the layering in the Blue Lias
· The origin of cone-in-cone structures and "Sunstones"
in particular
· Slump structures in the White Lias (Rhaetic or top-most
Triassic)
Lunch
at pubs around the Cobb (Lyme Regis Harbour).
After
lunch walk out to the end of the Cobb to view the landslips either
side of the town and discuss what can be done to save Lyme Regis
from unstable cliffs and rising sea levels. Walk around the Bay
to view the Black Ven landslips and discuss the proposed land
stabilisation work on Church Cliffs. As the tide will now prevent
access below Church Cliffs, rest of the afternoon free to re-visit
the Museum, visit fossil shops or whatever.
Health & Safety Advice: beware falling rocks from Blue
Lias (hard hats are advised if you intend to stand directly under
the cliff, which you have to do to see sedimentary structures),
rough beach walking over boulders (stout shoes/boots advised,
there is a real risk of twisting an ankle or falling if care is
not taken) and sunburn.
Dog
Advice: all beaches are dog friendly except the main beach
in Lyme, which is subject to a dog ban in the summer. Dogs must
be on leads on the promenade and mess cleared up.
Dinner:
at the Lion Royal Hotel, 7pm. Talk. We have been unable to get
a speaker from the Dorset and East Devon World Heritage team because
of a World Vertebrate Palaeontology Conference in Bristol, but
have been promised the loan of a presentation. We can also solve
the problems set this morning!
Sunday:
(low tide 13.41, 0.3m, high tide 20.37 4.6m)
9.00
Visit the coast further west of Lyme to see the red beds of the
Triassic and the Cretaceous Greensands and Chalk by walking from
Beer (Beer Stone, Cenomanian Greensand) to Branscombe (Mercia
Mudstone).
Lunch
at the Shanty Café, Branscombe Mouth.
Walk
back to Beer by different route (scope for car shares for people
wanting early departure).
Those
staying on: visit halite solution salt collapse structures in
Mercia Mudstones and karst features in Upper Greensand at Salcombe
Mouth and walk on to Sidmouth to see Otter (Bunter) Sandstone,
returning over Salcombe Hill to see sarsen stones.
Monday
- if anybody wants to stay on, further trips can easily be arranged
to other parts of the Jurassic, Triassic or Cretaceous.
RJB
ver 17 March 2009.
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