15: Exploring Castle Eden Dene and the Changing Coastline

Journey through Durham Denes and Castle Eden Dene, learning about ice age origins and coastal regeneration. Flora, fauna, unique landscapes.
14: Changing Beach Landscape: From Rock Waste to Beach Rollover

Changing Beach Landscape: From Rock Waste to Beach Rollover
13: Geological Clues and Coastal Changes: Unravelling the Secrets of Blackhall’s Artificial Beach

Castle Eden Dene, geomorphology, artificial beach platform, Carboniferous rock waste, erosion, coastal processes.
12: Durham Coast: The Impact of Rock Waste Dumping and Unexpected Benefits

Durham’s infamous black features resulted from rock waste dumping, which unintentionally created habitats and slowed coastal erosion temporarily.
11: Beach Contrasts – Natural and Artificial Origins

Blackhall beach reveals natural and artificial features: pebbly foreshore from waves, upper beach with coal waste dumping remnants.
10: Northward from Blackhall Rocks: The Changing Beachscape

North from Blackhall Rocks, beach morphs due to historic coal waste. Rock waste platform reflects colliery dumping, aerial flights shaped coast.
09: Exploring Blackhall’s Boulder Conglomerate: Zechstein Cycle 1

North of Gin Cave, Zechstein Cycle 1’s impressive boulder conglomerate formed by intense wave reworking at the reef’s edge.
08: Gin Cave

The Gin Cave
07: Examining Blackhall’s Crinkly Beds: Ancient Cyanobacteria and Ripple Formation

Examining Blackhall’s Crinkly Beds: Ancient Cyanobacteria and Ripple Formation
06: Exploring Blackhall’s Rock Layers: Ford Formation to Crinkly Beds

Blackhall Rocks: Ford Formation to Crinkly Beds. Reef rampart, high-energy Boulder conglomerate, quiet lagoonal sediments, stromatolites in Roker Formation.