A tree by the river, Hubbard's Hills, Louth.pic.twitter.com/Fa8AyLYCfs
History, archaeology, place-names & early lit. Main research on post-Roman Britain & Anglo-Saxon England; also long-distance trade, migration & contact.
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A tree by the river, Hubbard's Hills, Louth.pic.twitter.com/Fa8AyLYCfs
Hubbard's Hills gorge, Louth, was formed in the last 'Ice Age' by water draining from a lake over Hallington+Raithby http://www.caitlingreen.org/2014/09/of-chalk-and-ice-white-cliffs-of-louth.html …pic.twitter.com/T3oB6jp11u
Hubbard's Hills gorge is one of 2 glacial overspill channels nr Louth; another older, higher one located to the west https://www.bing.com/mapspreview?osid=94221a94-09af-4b97-86e2-f1d2cbf01a9c&cp=53.360658~-0.030313&lvl=14&style=h&v=2&sV=2&form=S00027 …pic.twitter.com/ILGEVS7vhl
'The Geomorphology of the Lincolnshire Wolds': http://www.emgs.org.uk/files/mercian_vol13on/Mercian%20Geologist%20volume%2015%202000-2003/Mercian%202000%20v15%20p041%20Lincs%20Wolds%20geomorphology%20excursion,%20Robinson.pdf … (Map=max extent of the proglacial lake nr Louth during last Ice Age)pic.twitter.com/WeWA4HJNqN
Wow this is fascinating. Little did I know when I paddled in the stream as a toddler!
I like to imagine how impressive the waterfall that cut Hubbard's Hills must have been as it drained out that lake...! :)
Wouldn't that have been amazing. I guess Cadwell Park was pretty soggy back then!
It def wouldn't have been very habitable! And in the medieval period it was ‘the valley where wild-cats are found’, of course...!
Have you written or can you recommend any books on Lincs geology/history?
I have one on 'Stone Age' to Medieval period in the Louth region here: http://www.caitlingreen.org/p/the-origins-of-louth-archaeology-and.html … :) Not really a decent single >
> volume on Lincolnshire, in my view anyways----tend to often be rather disappointing & lack detail on earlier eras etc! :)
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