Brannon's Picture of The Isle of Wight eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 137 pages of information about Brannon's Picture of The Isle of Wight.

Brannon's Picture of The Isle of Wight eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 137 pages of information about Brannon's Picture of The Isle of Wight.

One peculiarity deserves to be particularly noticed; namely, the extraordinary state in which the FLINTS are found in the great range of chalk hills,—­for all those in regular beds, are broken into pieces in every direction, from two or three inches long, to an almost impalpable powder; and yet show no other indication of their fracture than very fine lines, until the investing chalk be removed, when they fall at once to pieces!  But the separate flints or nodules in the body of the chalk strata are not so:  which led the late Sir H. Englefield to conjecture, that the phenomenon was caused in the moment of the immense concussion which subverted the whole mass of strata, and placed them in their present nearly vertical position.

Another interesting circumstance in the geological structure of the Isle of Wight, is a series of strata, vertical or highly inclined, which run across the middle of it from east to west; while the strata on each side are horizontal; they consist of ... a very thick stratum of clay and sand (observable at Alum Bay), flinty chalk, chalk without flints, chalk-marle, green sandstone with lime-stone and chert, dark-grey marle, and ferruginous sand.

A PROGRESSIVE CHANGE is evidently taking place in the boundary line of the coast—­the sea making considerable invasions on the south side, which is exposed to the resistless currents of the ocean; while on the north it is found to be more gradually receding, from the accumulation of sand and shingle drifted and deposited by the less impetuous tides of the Solent Channel.—­About Brixton, for instance, between Blackgang Chine and the Freshwater Cliffs, the loss of land has been estimated (from the successive removals of paths and hedges,) to exceed 200 feet in breadth in less than a century; while in the neighbourhood of Ryde it is known that the bed of a valley formerly accessible to the sea is now rather above its highest level; and even in 1760, when Fielding visited the island, the coast there is described by him as a wide disgusting waste of mud, which is now covered with an increasing layer of sand, sufficiently firm to bear wheel-carriages; and no doubt but in process of time there will be a great accession to the beach, from the constant though slow operation of the same causes—­denuding on the one side, and reciprocally accumulating on the other.

Good Stone of various qualities is found in most parts of the island:  and with that procured from the quarries of Binstead, the body of Winchester Cathedral was built.  All the houses along the Undercliff are constructed with a beautiful kind of freestone procured on the spot.

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Brannon's Picture of The Isle of Wight from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.