Thames Basin Heaths

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Sunningdale Golf Course

The Thames Basin Heaths are a natural region in southern England in Berkshire, Hampshire and Surrey, a slightly mottled east-west belt of ecologically recognised and protected land.

They are recognised as

Chilterns and to the near south are the Hampshire Downs.[1] Not protected as extensively but in significant part adding to the habitats of fauna are the Thames Valley
(including Thames Basin lowlands) to the east and as described to the north.

Environment

The terrain of the

heathland is characterized by flat or gently sloping plateaux with numerous watercourses incising broad or sometimes steep-sided valleys. Apart from these, the heaths are lower heading east (before the London Basin) and along the main river valleys to the low-lying areas of the Kennet floodplain and lower reaches of the Loddon and its largest tributary, the Blackwater. At the western edge is the chalk scarp of the Hampshire Downs. The highest elevation is 296 metres.[1]

Drainage

The other main watercourses are the

Protected areas

Track through the forestry plantation in the Broadmoor to Bagshot Woods and Heaths SSI

Just over 20,000 hectares (17%) sits in the

AONB
.

The zone has:

There are many

Sites of Special Scientific Interest or SSSIs within – one of the largest is the Broadmoor to Bagshot Woods and Heaths
SSSI where rare types of birds and other species are professionally monitored and conserved.

Much of the east of the zone there can be easily traced a

Roman Road, the Devil's Highway (Roman Britain). The region has an Iron Age hillfort, one of several so-named, in this case specifically, Caesar's Camp, Bracknell Forest
.

Incursionary barriers

Ecologically near-sterile obstacles to migration, coupled with longstanding biome and habitat loss are significant. Chiefly these are the:

To a lesser extent (the narrower) main routes of rail and road:

No wildlife crossings to abate these obstacles have yet been made.

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d NCA 129: Thames Basin Heaths Key Facts & Data at www.naturalengland.org.uk. Accessed on 6 Apr 2013.