Sunday, 29 June 2014

A Grass Snake and Fossil Hunting in Charmouth

Delighted to see a grass snake basking in the morning sunshine. He/she was at the base of the bank, in the back kitchen garden, by the size of it I would guess it is a mature female.

We have been in Charmouth for the past week, it is a charming place, the locals were friendly and the weather mostly good. It is not comercialised and is a good place to search for fossils. We found cracking pieces of slate on large stones produced many, the slate was on the sandy part of the east beach, lower down than the pebbles and broke easily, most times we broke slate we found at least one ammonite.


The west beach produced belemnites and crinoides, we didn't find any pieces of crinoid stem, but plenty of stones and rocks showed crinoid leaf like fossils. (My daughter told me the place to find pieces of crinoid stem is on the beach at Robin Hood's Bay in Yorkshire). Crinoids are fossilised marine creatures which look like plants and are known as sea lilies.

The last few hours in Charmouth were spent on the east beach and it was then and there that I managed to find two tiny perfect ammonites, a perfect end to a perfect week.

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