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Harlow Common M11 motorway cutting, HARLOW COMMON, Harlow District, TL483087, Historical site only
Site category: London Clay, Claygate or Bagshot Beds
Summary Temporary exposure of fossiliferous deposits. Further excavations in the vicinity could yield further fossils. ----------------------------------------------------------------- Site description At Harlow Common, at the eastern end of the Harlow district, construction of the M11 motorway required the excavation of a deep cutting, which was crossed by a bridge carrying the road to Foster Street. The work was carried out between September 1973 and June 1974 and the sides of the cutting and the drainage trenches revealed an excellent exposure of London Clay containing many fossils. Numerous marine shells were found, such as gastropods and bivalves, together with other fossils such as the teeth of fish. Fruits from rainforest trees that grew along the shores of the sub-tropical London Clay Sea were also found which included the palm tree Nipa burtini. Fossils from the London Clay are some 50 million years old and are from a time when the climate of Essex was considerably warmer than the present day.
The fossils from this site are in the collections of the Essex Field Club (originally in the former Passmore Edwards Museum, Stratford).
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Reference: Ward 1978.
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