Blast Beach is just south of Seaham. We are going to explore the following themes:
Coal extraction over the last century
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- Below sea level are the Carboniferous rocks that are between 345 – 290 million years old.
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- The Carboniferous rocks contain the coal.
The Permian rocks above the Carboniferous rocks
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- Permian Magnesian Limestone can be seen in the cliffs that sweep around the Blast Beach embayment.
- They were created 290 – 248 million years ago.
- At the Blast Beach are part of the Roker Formation (Zechstein Cycle 2; Z2)
Glacial deposits from the last ice age
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- The Glacial sediments were deposited about 25,000 – 19,000 years ago.
- There are glacial tills that relate to ice overriding the landscape
- There are outwash sediments deposited by meltwater streams
Dumping of mining waste during the last century
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- Rock waste dumped from the underground excavation of the mines covers the beach from Seaham to Blackhall
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- Mining activity ended 35 – 40 years ago in Durham, but evidence of waste being dumped on beaches remains today.
- Mining activity ended 35 – 40 years ago in Durham, but evidence of waste being dumped on beaches remains today.