British Coastal Deposits Group Explained

British Coastal Deposits Group
Type:Group
Age:Cromerian to Flandrian age
Prilithology:sand
Otherlithology:gravel, silt, clay. peat
Period:Pleistocene
Country:England, Scotland, Wales
Thickness:up to 80m
Extent:British Isles (not Ireland)[1]

The British Coastal Deposits Group is a Quaternary lithostratigraphic group (a sequence of rock strata or other definable geological units) present in coastal and estuarine areas around the margins of Great Britain. They are a mix of sands, gravels, silts, clays and peat and, north of a line between the Ribble and Tyne, include glacio-eustatically raised deposits. They lie unconformably on deposits of variously the Britannia Catchments Group (with which they also interfinger), Albion Glacigenic Group, Caledonia Glacigenic Group, Dunwich Group, Crag Group or earlier bedrock. Their upper boundary is the present day ground surface.[2]

Notes and References

  1. Terminology as per BGS reference
  2. Web site: BGS Lexicon of Named Rock Units - Result Details. Bgs.ac.uk. 17 January 2019.