Greylake

Coordinates: 51°05′54″N 2°52′52″W / 51.09838°N 2.88109°W / 51.09838; -2.88109
Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Greylake
Notification
1987 (1987)
Natural England website

Greylake (

notified
in 1987.

This site, on the Somerset Levels, consists of 20 low-lying fields in the north west corner of King's Sedgemoor,[1] and includes the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds Greylake nature reserve which has taken over arable farmland and is now home to northern lapwings, common snipe, Eurasian curlews, redshanks, yellow wagtails, skylarks, and meadow pipits.[2]

This location is the type section for the Pleistocene Burtle Beds, as it is probably the most complete Burtle Beds sequence in Somerset. It demonstrates a sequence of

glacial) gravels, marine intertidal silts and marine subtidal. Rich molluscan, ostracod, and foraminifera assemblages and a mammalian fauna, including red deer (Cervus elephus), aurochs (Bos primigenius), and fallow deer (Dama dama) have been recorded.[3]

Greylake was flooded during the winter flooding of 2013–14 on the Somerset Levels.

References

  1. ^ "RSPB Greylake". Attractions in Somerset.
  2. ^ "Greylake". RSPB. Retrieved 6 September 2020.
  3. ^ English Nature citation sheet for the site (accessed 7 August 2006)

External links