Marros west - cryogenic anticline and solifluction…
West of Telpyn Point - fault in Telpyn Point Sands…
Cliff section east of Amroth 1
Cliff section east of Amroth 2
Marros west - Teague's Wood and drift-filled valle…
Telpyn-Marros panorama
Marros west cliffs
Marros Sands and Top Castle hill fort panorama
Marros Sands panorama
Marros Sands
The River Taf Estuary at Laugharne (Plus x 1 PiP)
Carmarthen Bay panorama from Sir Johns Hill, Laugh…
The Boathouse on the Taf Estuary
The River Taf Estuary at Laugharne
Crowded beach
Wall at Dinefwr Castle
Rural Wales
Keep at Dinefwr Castle
Keep at Dinefwr Castle
Pendine Sands from Gilman Point
Pendine land, sea and sky
Pendine Sands from Dolwen Point
West from Dolwen Point, near Pendine, Carmarthensh…
Chambered Cairn at Morfa Bychan, Ragwen Point, Car…
Pont Spwdwr, near Kidwelly, Carmarthenshire
It was a wet day at Llansteffan Castle, Carmarthen…
1/125 • f/8.0 • 17.0 mm • ISO 100 •
Canon EOS 600D
EF-S15-85mm f/3.5-5.6 IS USM
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Marros west - cryogenic anticline and solifluction deposits 1
Marros Sands to Amroth
Just east of Amroth, we cross the county boundary into Carmarthenshire. The fine beach of Marros Sands, some 4 km east of Amroth is relatively isolated between Telpyn Point and Ragwen Point. There is no road access; the only way to get here is along the coastal paths, along the beach at lowest tide, or by boat.
At the western end of Marros Sands the Teague's Wood valley cuts down to the beach. The valley centre is filled with solifluction deposits ('Head') formed by freeze-thaw cycles of permafrost melting and refreezing at the end of the last glacial period (Devensian).
In the centre is a cryogenic anticlinal fold in the shales of the Bishopton Mudstone Formation The fold is probably due to valley bulging during melting of the permafrost. The fold is quite superficial and probably does not extend more than a few metres into the sub-surface.
Overlying the shales are angular, frost-shattered, shale fragments, possibly with some upward pointing ice-wedging structures. This is overlain in turn by a paler, angular, solifluction 'Head' and modern river alluvium, mostly sand with rounded pebbles and cobbles. See notes.
The walking stick is approx. 90 cm long.
Just east of Amroth, we cross the county boundary into Carmarthenshire. The fine beach of Marros Sands, some 4 km east of Amroth is relatively isolated between Telpyn Point and Ragwen Point. There is no road access; the only way to get here is along the coastal paths, along the beach at lowest tide, or by boat.
At the western end of Marros Sands the Teague's Wood valley cuts down to the beach. The valley centre is filled with solifluction deposits ('Head') formed by freeze-thaw cycles of permafrost melting and refreezing at the end of the last glacial period (Devensian).
In the centre is a cryogenic anticlinal fold in the shales of the Bishopton Mudstone Formation The fold is probably due to valley bulging during melting of the permafrost. The fold is quite superficial and probably does not extend more than a few metres into the sub-surface.
Overlying the shales are angular, frost-shattered, shale fragments, possibly with some upward pointing ice-wedging structures. This is overlain in turn by a paler, angular, solifluction 'Head' and modern river alluvium, mostly sand with rounded pebbles and cobbles. See notes.
The walking stick is approx. 90 cm long.
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