List of Sites of Special Scientific Interest in Northamptonshire
A ridge of low Jurassic hills runs through the county, separating the basins of the Welland and Nene rivers. The county has good transportation connections as it is crossed by two main railway lines and the M1 motorway, and it has many small industrial centres rather than large conurbations.[7]
In England,
Nature Conservation Review sites, and fourteen are managed by the Wildlife Trust for Bedfordshire, Cambridgeshire and Northamptonshire. The largest is Upper Nene Valley Gravel Pits, which is a Ramsar internationally important wetland site[10] and a Special Protection Area under the European Union Directive on the Conservation of Wild Birds.[11] The smallest is Irchester Old Lodge Pit, which is described in the Geological Conservation Review as a Middle Jurassic site of national importance.[12]
Key
Interest
Public access
|
Other classifications
|
Sites
Site name | Photograph | B | G | Area[a] | Public access |
Location[a] | Other classifications |
Map[b] | Citation[c] | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Alder Wood and Meadow | 13.2 hectares (33 acres)[13] |
YES | Corby 52°27′11″N 0°46′08″W / 52.453°N 0.769°W SP 837 846[13] |
Map | Citation | This semi-natural ancient broadleaved wood is a surviving fragment of the medieval enchanter's nightshade. The meadow is agriculturally unimproved, and it has surviving medieval ridge and furrow.[14]
| ||||
Aldwincle Marsh | 2.0 hectares (4.9 acres)[15] |
NO | Aldwincle 52°24′58″N 0°31′30″W / 52.416°N 0.525°W TL 004 807[15] |
Map | Citation | This marsh and Harpers Brook.[16]
| ||||
Ashton Wold | 54.0 hectares (133 acres)[17] |
YES | Oundle 52°28′30″N 0°23′38″W / 52.475°N 0.394°W TL 091 875[17] |
RHPG[18]
|
Map | Citation | Ashton Wold was owned by buckthorn.[19]
| |||
Badby Wood | 47.2 hectares (117 acres)[20] |
YES | Badby 52°13′12″N 1°10′37″W / 52.220°N 1.177°W SP 563 582[20] |
Map | Citation | This is ancient semi-natural woodland on acidic soils, and it has been forested for over 700 years. It is mainly | ||||
Badsaddle, Withmale Park and Bush Walk Woods | 25.2 hectares (62 acres)[22] |
YES | Wellingborough 52°20′24″N 0°46′44″W / 52.340°N 0.779°W SP 832 720[22] |
Map | Citation | This is ancient coppice woodland with goldilocks buttercup and four species of orchid.[23]
| ||||
Banhaw, Spring and Blackthorn's Woods | 123.4 hectares (305 acres)[24] |
PP | Corby 52°28′48″N 0°34′16″W / 52.480°N 0.571°W SP 971 878[24] |
Map | Citation | These woods are one of the largest remnants of the medieval wood melick.[25]
| ||||
Birch Spinney and Mawsley Marsh | 12.3 hectares (30 acres)[26] |
NO | Broughton 52°22′55″N 0°48′43″W / 52.382°N 0.812°W SP 809 766[26] |
Map | Citation | Birch Spinney is a rare type of water horsetail. There is also a stretch of a dismantled railway line.[27]
| ||||
Blisworth Rectory Farm Quarry | 1.0 hectare (2.5 acres)[28] |
NO | Blisworth 52°10′16″N 0°57′14″W / 52.171°N 0.954°W SP 716 530[28] |
GCR[29] | Map | Citation | This site exposes gastropods, and there are also nautiloids and vertebrate teeth.[30]
| |||
Bosworth Mill Meadow | 5.7 hectares (14 acres)[31] |
YES | Welford 52°26′06″N 1°04′37″W / 52.435°N 1.077°W SP 628 822[31] |
Map | Citation | This hay meadow is traditionally managed. The main flora are great burnet in wet areas. Springs produce seepages which are rich in mosses and sedges. Dry upper slopes are species poor.[32]
| ||||
Bozeat Meadow | 2.6 hectares (6.4 acres)[33] |
NO | Bozeat 52°13′19″N 0°40′55″W / 52.222°N 0.682°W SP 901 590[33] |
Map | Citation | This is unimproved grassland on well-drained clay and | ||||
Bucknell Wood Meadows | 9.2 hectares (23 acres)[35] |
YES | Silverstone 52°05′56″N 1°03′54″W / 52.099°N 1.065°W SP 641 449[35] |
Map | Citation | This site consists of agriculturally unimproved fields on seasonally waterlogged soils. The flora is diverse with many herbs, including devil's-bit scabious. Variations in the types of flora are partly due to different soils and partly to previous management practices.[36]
| ||||
Bugbrooke Meadows | 10.1 hectares (25 acres)[37] |
YES | Nether Heyford 52°13′23″N 1°01′05″W / 52.223°N 1.018°W SP 671 587[37] |
WTBCN[38]
|
Map | Citation | These meadows on the bank of the greater pond sedge. There are ancient hedges which are important both historically and as a habitat for wildlife.[39]
| |||
Bulwick Meadows | 1.2 hectares (3.0 acres)[40] |
PP | Bulwick 52°32′20″N 0°35′02″W / 52.539°N 0.584°W SP 961 943[40] |
Map | Citation | These marshy meadows are in the flood plain of the | ||||
Calender Meadows | 3.1 hectares (7.7 acres)[42] |
NO | Guilsborough 52°22′05″N 0°59′42″W / 52.368°N 0.995°W SP 685 749[42] |
Map | Citation | This is described by false oat-grass.[43]
| ||||
Collyweston Great Wood and Easton Hornstocks | 151.5 hectares (374 acres)[44] |
NO | Easton on the Hill 52°35′38″N 0°30′25″W / 52.594°N 0.507°W TF 012 006[44] |
Map | Citation | These woods have | ||||
Collyweston Quarries | 6.6 hectares (16 acres)[48] |
YES | Easton on the Hill 52°37′23″N 0°31′08″W / 52.623°N 0.519°W TF 003 038[48] |
WTBCN[49]
|
Map | Citation | This former limestone quarry is now rough grassland on clustered bellflower. There is a substantial butterfly population.[50]
| |||
Collyweston Slate Mine | 0.9 hectares (2.2 acres)[51] |
NO | Easton on the Hill 52°36′58″N 0°31′26″W / 52.616°N 0.524°W TF 000 030[51] |
GCR[52] | Map | Citation | This slate mine was operated until 1963, quarrying Collyweston slate, which dates to the Jurassic. The shaft exposes a section described by Natural England as "stratigraphically important", and it is the type locality for the slate.[53]
| |||
Coombe Hill Hollow | 4.3 hectares (11 acres)[54] |
NO | Welford 52°26′46″N 1°00′11″W / 52.446°N 1.003°W SP 678 835[54] |
Map | Citation | This steep narrow valley has neutral grassland which has never been subject to fertilisers or herbicides, and it has diverse flora. Grasses include mouse-ear hawkweed, and there are locally important butterfly populations.[55]
| ||||
Cowthick Quarry | 1.4 hectares (3.5 acres)[56] |
NO | Corby 52°28′55″N 0°38′20″W / 52.482°N 0.639°W SP 925 879[56] |
Map | Citation | This site exposes Middle Jurassic rocks dating to 174 to 163 million years ago, and in the view of Natural England it has "the best and most instructive sections" of the period in the Midlands. A fault during the Pleistocene has caused the juxtaposition of six Jurassic formations.[57] | ||||
Cranford St John | 2.8 hectares (6.9 acres)[58] |
NO | Kettering 52°22′41″N 0°38′42″W / 52.378°N 0.645°W SP 923 764[58] |
GCR[59] | Map | Citation | This former quarry exposes rocks from the Rutland Formation and up to nearly the top of the White Limestone Formation, dating to the Middle Jurassic Bathonian stage, 168 to 166 million years ago. The site is the type section for a freshwater clay bed which is thought to result from a widespread storm deposit.[60] | |||
Dungee Corner Meadow | 5.1 hectares (13 acres)[61] |
NO | Bozeat 52°13′52″N 0°38′35″W / 52.231°N 0.643°W SP 927 600[61] |
Map | Citation | This well-drained hay meadow on green-winged orchid.[62]
| ||||
Everdon Stubbs | 29.5 hectares (73 acres)[63] |
YES | Farthingstone 52°12′18″N 1°06′54″W / 52.205°N 1.115°W SP 605 566[63] |
WT[64] | Map | Citation | This woodland site has areas of acidic free-draining soil, and other damper areas. It is described by orpine and bitter vetch.[65]
| |||
Finedon Top Lodge Quarry | 0.9 hectares (2.2 acres)[66] |
FP | Finedon 52°19′12″N 0°38′31″W / 52.320°N 0.642°W SP 926 699[66] |
GCR[67] | Map | Citation | This site shows a complete section dating to the Rutland Formation of the Bathonian stage of the Middle Jurassic, 168 to 166 million years ago. It is the type section for the Wellingborough Member, and contains fossils of oysters and Rhynchonellida.[68] | |||
Geddington Chase | 39.1 hectares (97 acres)[69] |
NO | Corby 52°27′11″N 0°40′12″W / 52.453°N 0.670°W SP 904 847[69] |
Map | Citation | Geddington Chase is a surviving fragment of the medieval wild daffodils.[70]
| ||||
Glapthorn Cow Pasture | 28.2 hectares (70 acres)[71] |
YES | Oundle 52°30′14″N 0°31′30″W / 52.504°N 0.525°W TL 002 905[71] |
WTBCN[72]
|
Map | Citation | This site has nightingales.[73]
| |||
Hardwick Lodge Meadow | 10.0 hectares (25 acres)[74] |
YES | Wellingborough 52°19′26″N 0°46′37″W / 52.324°N 0.777°W SP 834 702[74] |
Map | Citation | This unimproved grassland on heath spotted-orchid.[75]
| ||||
Helmdon Disused Railway | 16.6 hectares (41 acres)[76] |
YES | Brackley 52°04′01″N 1°08′35″W / 52.067°N 1.143°W SP 588 412[76] |
Map | Citation | This is small blue butterfly.[77]
| ||||
High Wood and Meadow | 16.5 hectares (41 acres)[78] |
YES | Daventry 52°11′17″N 1°08′10″W / 52.188°N 1.136°W SP 591 547[78] |
WTBCN[79]
|
Map | Citation | The wood is ancient and semi-natural on acid soils. It has diverse ground flora, including hairy wood-rush and broad-leaved helleborine. The meadow is acid grassland of a type which is now uncommon, and there are also areas of neutral grassland and marsh on silty peat. There are many ant hills of the yellow meadow ant.[80]
| |||
Irchester Old Lodge Pit | 0.4 hectares (0.99 acres)[81] |
NO | Irchester 52°16′30″N 0°39′40″W / 52.275°N 0.661°W SP 914 649[81] |
GCR[82] | Map | Citation | This is described by Natural England as "a key Middle Jurassic locality important for the information it yields on both Bathonian environments and stratigraphy", 168 to 166 million years ago. It exposes White Limestone which has many fossils, especially molluscs.[12] | |||
King's Cliffe Banks | 7.7 hectares (19 acres)[83] |
YES | King's Cliffe 52°33′50″N 0°30′18″W / 52.564°N 0.505°W TL 014 972[83] |
Map | Citation |
This former quarry has undulating bryophytes and lichens.[84]
| ||||
Mantles Heath | 13.7 hectares (34 acres)[85] |
YES | Daventry 52°11′31″N 1°07′37″W / 52.192°N 1.127°W SP 597 552[85] |
Map | Citation | Most of this woodland site is on acid soil, but the western part is on opposite-leaved golden-saxifrage and slender St John's wort.[86]
| ||||
Mill Crook | 5.9 hectares (15 acres)[87] |
YES | Towcester 52°06′36″N 0°52′19″W / 52.110°N 0.872°W SP 773 463[87] |
WTBCN[88]
|
Map | Citation | Signs of medieval | |||
Old Sulehay Forest | 34.8 hectares (86 acres)[90] |
YES | King's Cliffe 52°34′26″N 0°26′02″W / 52.574°N 0.434°W TL 062 985[90] |
WTBCN[91]
|
Map | Citation | This ancient forest has a number of different soil conditions and coppice types, and the ground flora is diverse. Abundant herbs include | |||
Pipewell Woods | 85.3 hectares (211 acres)[93] |
YES | Corby 52°28′01″N 0°46′30″W / 52.467°N 0.775°W SP 833 861[93] |
NCR[94]
|
Map | Citation | The woods are an example of wet herb paris and wood speedwell. Open grassy areas provide additional habitats for birds and insects.[95]
| |||
Pitsford Reservoir
|
413.1 hectares (1,021 acres)[96] |
YES | Brixworth 52°19′26″N 0°52′01″W / 52.324°N 0.867°W SP 773 701[96] |
WTBCN[97]
|
Map | Citation | This is the largest body of water in the county, and is used by wintering wildfowl, including the | |||
Plumpton Pasture | 3.6 hectares (8.9 acres)[99] |
NO | Towcester 52°07′41″N 1°07′59″W / 52.128°N 1.133°W SP 594 480[99] |
Map | Citation | There are medieval Yorkshire fog grasses. There are also mature hedges and a small pond.[100]
| ||||
Racecourse Farm Fields | 5.0 hectares (12 acres)[101] |
NO | Easton on the Hill 52°37′34″N 0°29′53″W / 52.626°N 0.498°W TF 017 042[101] |
Map | Citation | This former quarry is grassland on clustered bellflower and small scabious. The sward is kept short by grazing by sheep and cattle.[102]
| ||||
Ramsden Corner Plantation | 3.2 hectares (7.9 acres)[103] |
YES | Northampton 52°12′11″N 1°05′20″W / 52.203°N 1.089°W SP 623 564[103] |
WTBCN[104]
|
Map | Citation | A stream runs through this valley site, which also has acidic grassland, woodland and scrub on clay and sand. Plants such as Opposite-leaved golden-saxifrage is found on wet slopes.[105]
| |||
River Ise and Meadows | 13.5 hectares (33 acres)[106] |
PP | Geddington 52°26′17″N 0°43′08″W / 52.438°N 0.719°W SP 871 830[106] |
WTBCN[107]
|
Map | Citation | The river is described by base-rich water". The banks have tall fen, woodland and grassland, and there is also a species rich flood meadow. The river has many bends and loops, with silty pools and gravel shoals. The invertebrates are diverse, and there is a population of the nationally declining freshwater crayfish Austropotamobius pallipes.[108]
| |||
Roade Cutting | 15.2 hectares (38 acres)[109] |
NO | Roade 52°09′58″N 0°54′22″W / 52.166°N 0.906°W SP 749 525[109] |
GCR[110] | Map | Citation | The cutting exposes rocks dating to the Middle Jurassic Bathonian stage, between 168 and 166 million years ago. It is described by Natural England as important for reconstructing the environment of deposition during the period, and correlating the White Limestone Formation in Oxfordshire with that of the East Midlands.[111] | |||
Salcey Forest | 159.6 hectares (394 acres)[112] |
YES | Hartwell 52°09′07″N 0°49′05″W / 52.152°N 0.818°W SP 809 510[112] |
Map | Citation | This large forest has many mature oak trees. The diverse ground flora includes enchanter's nightshade. There are many breeding birds and nationally notable moth species.[113]
| ||||
Short Wood | 25.3 hectares (63 acres)[114] |
YES | Oundle 52°30′40″N 0°30′18″W / 52.511°N 0.505°W TL 015 913[114] |
WTBCN[115]
|
Map | Citation | Short Wood is a small remnant of the medieval royal hunting greater butterfly orchid.[116]
| |||
Southfield Farm Marsh | 8.6 hectares (21 acres)[117] |
PP | Kettering 52°22′26″N 0°42′07″W / 52.374°N 0.702°W SP 884 758[117] |
WTBCN[118]
|
Map | Citation | This wetland site has tall plants such as Purple loosestrife is found in grassland areas.[118]
| |||
Stoke and Bowd Lane Woods | 36.4 hectares (90 acres)[119] |
PP | Corby 52°28′12″N 0°49′12″W / 52.470°N 0.820°W SP 802 864[119] |
WTBCN[120]
|
Map | Citation | These ancient semi-natural woods were formerly part of the medieval greater butterfly-orchid.[121]
| |||
Sudborough Green Lodge Meadows | 13.6 hectares (34 acres)[122] |
NO | Sudborough 52°26′49″N 0°34′23″W / 52.447°N 0.573°W SP 970 841[122] |
NCR[123]
|
Map | Citation | This site consists of two hay meadows, one of which is agriculturally unimproved and has large areas of medieval ridge and furrow. An experiment in trying to create attractive grasslands in the other field has potential for scientific research. Ponds, scrub, willow trees, hedgerows and wild pear trees add to the ecological value.[123] | |||
Syresham Marshy Meadows | 17.8 hectares (44 acres)[124] |
PP | Silverstone 52°04′41″N 1°04′01″W / 52.078°N 1.067°W SP 640 425[124] |
Map | Citation | This site consists of two nearby areas of wetland in valleys which drain into the mire on shallow peat, and the southern one is agriculturally unimproved grassland and marsh on diverse soils, which has over a hundred flowering plant species.[125]
| ||||
Thrapston Station Quarry | 4.5 hectares (11 acres)[126] |
NO | Thrapston 52°23′17″N 0°31′59″W / 52.388°N 0.533°W SP 999 776[126] |
GCR[127] | Map | Citation | This site has the most important remaining | |||
Titchmarsh Meadow | 2.2 hectares (5.4 acres)[130] |
NO | Titchmarsh 52°24′18″N 0°29′13″W / 52.405°N 0.487°W TL 030 796[130] |
Map | Citation | This poorly drained field has a rich variety of plant species, including pepper saxifrage. A medieval fish pond, which has been drained, has marsh vegetation. Hedges, streams and ditches provide a valuable habitat for invertebrates and small mammals.[131]
| ||||
Twywell Gullet | 17.1 hectares (42 acres)[132] |
PP | Kettering 52°23′17″N 0°36′50″W / 52.388°N 0.614°W SP 944 775[132] |
WTBCN[133]
|
Map | Citation | Twywell Gullet is a former ironstone quarry which has deep cuttings with steeply sloping banks. It has species-rich limestone grassland on the slopes and ponds and scrub in the bottoms. There are a number of uncommon ground nesting bees and wasps, and beetles include the nationally rare ruddy darter.[134] | |||
Upper Cherwell at Trafford House | 18.6 hectares (46 acres)[135] |
YES | Eydon 52°08′06″N 1°13′44″W / 52.135°N 1.229°W SP 528 488[135] |
GCR[136] | Map | Citation | This site is at the confluence of the paleochannel could enable reconstruction of the environmental history.[137]
| |||
Upper Nene Valley Gravel Pits | 1,382.4 hectares (3,416 acres)[138] |
PP | Rushden 52°18′50″N 0°38′20″W / 52.314°N 0.639°W SP 928 693[138] |
Map | Citation | This site is described by Natural England as "a nationally important site for its breeding bird assemblage of lowland open waters and their margins". There are at least 21 breeding bird species, including mute swans, tufted ducks, little grebes, great crested grebes, little ringed plovers and redshanks.[143] | ||||
Wadenhoe Marsh and Achurch Meadow | 47.5 hectares (117 acres)[144] |
PP | Oundle 52°25′59″N 0°31′01″W / 52.433°N 0.517°W TL 009 826[144] |
Map | Citation | This complex site on both sides of the River Nene has a variety of habitats and a diverse range of fauna and flora. The west of the river is alder woodland and marshy grassland. On the east there is the largest example in the county of unimproved grassland on alluvium and gravel, with over 100 flowering plant species. An oxbow in the river is a site for rare plants.[145] | ||||
Wakerley Spinney | 4.4 hectares (11 acres)[146] |
NO | King's Cliffe 52°34′37″N 0°34′37″W / 52.577°N 0.577°W SP 965 986[146] |
Map | Citation | This is a remnant of the medieval fly orchid.[147]
| ||||
Weldon Park | 51.7 hectares (128 acres)[148] |
NO | Weldon 52°30′00″N 0°36′25″W / 52.500°N 0.607°W SP 946 900[148] |
Map | Citation | This ancient woodland is mainly purple emperor butterfly.[149]
| ||||
Whittlewood Forest | 400.1 hectares (989 acres)[150] |
PP | Silverstone 52°04′52″N 0°56′56″W / 52.081°N 0.949°W SP 721 430[150] |
NCR[94]
|
Map | Citation | This is ancient semi-natural woodlands with many trees which are mature or over-mature, especially pedunculate oaks. There are also many ash trees and a scattering of silver birches and aspens. The oaks have nationally rare and nationally uncommon beetles, and there are locally rare lichens.[151]
| |||
Wollaston Meadows | 14.3 hectares (35 acres)[152] |
NO | Wellingborough 52°16′26″N 0°41′10″W / 52.274°N 0.686°W SP 897 648[152] |
Map | Citation | This site on the banks of the red fescue. Overgrown hedges and ditches provide habitats for birds, small mammals and invertebrates.[153]
| ||||
Yardley Chase | 357.6 hectares (884 acres)[154] |
PP | Yardley Hastings 52°10′52″N 0°45′47″W / 52.181°N 0.763°W SP 846 543[154] |
Map | Citation | The Chase has diverse semi-natural habitats, and its value for invertebrates has been enhanced by military use of the site, which has resulted in a long absence of intensive agriculture. There is woodland and unimproved grassland, and 30 breeding butterfly species have been recorded.[155] |
See also
- List of Local Nature Reserves in Northamptonshire
- Wildlife Trust for Bedfordshire, Cambridgeshire and Northamptonshire
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Sites of Special Scientific Interest in Northamptonshire.
Notes
References
- ^ "List of all the places in East Midlands". Ordnance Survey. Archived from the original on 21 September 2017. Retrieved 21 September 2017.
- ^ "Standard Area Measurements (2016) for Administrative Areas in the United Kingdom". Office for National Statistics. Archived from the original on 10 April 2017. Retrieved 3 May 2017.
- ^ "Population Estimates for UK, England and Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland". Office for National Statistics. Archived from the original on 15 February 2017. Retrieved 31 July 2017.
- ^ "GB Counties — Past and present". Ordnance Survey. Archived from the original on 11 July 2017. Retrieved 21 September 2017.
- ^ "District and borough councils". Northamptonshire County Council. Archived from the original on 21 September 2017. Retrieved 21 September 2017.
- ^ "Plant and fungi species: Cowslip". Plantlife. Archived from the original on 2 January 2017. Retrieved 3 May 2017.
- ^ "Northamptonshire". Encyclopædia Britannica. Archived from the original on 22 April 2016. Retrieved 3 May 2017.
- ^ "Sites of Special Scientific Interest: Designation". Natural England. Archived from the original on 6 March 2016. Retrieved 19 April 2016.
- ^ a b "Designated Sites View: Northamptonshire". Natural England. Archived from the original on 20 August 2017. Retrieved 31 July 2017.
- ^ a b "Information Sheet on Ramsar Wetlands (RIS): Upper Nene Valley Gravel Pits" (PDF). Joint Nature Conservation Committee. Archived (PDF) from the original on 11 October 2012. Retrieved 19 December 2016.
- ^ a b "Special Protection Areas under the EC Birds Directive. Upper Nene Valley Gravel Pits" (PDF). Joint Nature Conservation Committee. Archived (PDF) from the original on 16 March 2016. Retrieved 19 December 2016.
- ^ a b "Irchester Old Lodge Pit citation" (PDF). Sites of Special Scientific Interest. Natural England. Archived from the original (PDF) on 28 March 2017. Retrieved 27 March 2017.
- ^ a b "Designated Sites View: Alder Wood and Meadow". Sites of Special Scientific Interest. Natural England. Archived from the original on 7 February 2017. Retrieved 6 February 2017.
- ^ "Alder Wood and Meadow citation" (PDF). Sites of Special Scientific Interest. Natural England. Archived from the original (PDF) on 3 March 2016. Retrieved 6 February 2017.
- ^ a b "Designated Sites View: Aldwincle Marsh". Sites of Special Scientific Interest. Natural England. Archived from the original on 20 February 2017. Retrieved 19 February 2017.
- ^ "Aldwincle Marsh citation" (PDF). Sites of Special Scientific Interest. Natural England. Archived from the original (PDF) on 20 December 2016. Retrieved 19 February 2017.
- ^ a b "Designated Sites View: Ashton Wold". Sites of Special Scientific Interest. Natural England. Archived from the original on 10 May 2017. Retrieved 19 December 2016.
- ^ "Ashton Wold". Historic England. Archived from the original on 20 December 2016. Retrieved 18 December 2016.
- ^ "Ashton Wold citation" (PDF). Sites of Special Scientific Interest. Natural England. Archived from the original (PDF) on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 19 December 2016.
- ^ a b "Designated Sites View: Badby Wood". Sites of Special Scientific Interest. Natural England. Archived from the original on 20 August 2017. Retrieved 26 February 2017.
- ^ "Badby Wood citation" (PDF). Sites of Special Scientific Interest. Natural England. Archived from the original (PDF) on 3 March 2016. Retrieved 26 February 2017.
- ^ a b "Designated Sites View: Badsaddle, Withmale Park and Bush Walk Woods". Sites of Special Scientific Interest. Natural England. Archived from the original on 10 May 2017. Retrieved 19 December 2016.
- ^ "Badsaddle, Withmale Park and Bush Walk Woods citation" (PDF). Sites of Special Scientific Interest. Natural England. Archived from the original (PDF) on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 19 December 2016.
- ^ a b "Designated Sites View: Banhaw, Spring and Blackthorn's Woods". Sites of Special Scientific Interest. Natural England. Archived from the original on 20 August 2017. Retrieved 19 December 2016.
- ^ "Banhaw, Spring and Blackthorn's Woods citation" (PDF). Sites of Special Scientific Interest. Natural England. Archived from the original (PDF) on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 19 December 2016.
- ^ a b "Designated Sites View: Birch Spinney and Mawsley Marsh". Sites of Special Scientific Interest. Natural England. Archived from the original on 20 August 2017. Retrieved 13 March 2017.
- ^ "Birch Spinney and Mawsley Marsh citation" (PDF). Sites of Special Scientific Interest. Natural England. Archived from the original (PDF) on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 13 March 2017.
- ^ a b "Designated Sites View: Blisworth Rectory Farm Quarry". Sites of Special Scientific Interest. Natural England. Archived from the original on 20 March 2017. Retrieved 19 March 2017.
- ^ "Blisworth Rectory Farm (Bathonian)". Joint Nature Conservation Committee. Archived from the original on 20 December 2016. Retrieved 18 December 2016.
- ^ "Blisworth Rectory Farm Quarry citation" (PDF). Sites of Special Scientific Interest. Natural England. Archived from the original (PDF) on 20 March 2017. Retrieved 19 March 2017.
- ^ a b "Designated Sites View: Bosworth Mill Meadow". Sites of Special Scientific Interest. Natural England. Archived from the original on 6 March 2017. Retrieved 5 February 2017.
- ^ "Bosworth Mill Meadow citation" (PDF). Sites of Special Scientific Interest. Natural England. Archived from the original (PDF) on 3 March 2016. Retrieved 5 February 2017.
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Sources
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