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Coordinates: 51°31′23″N 01°08′30″W / 51.52306°N 1.14167°W / 51.52306; -1.14167
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The Goring Gap is a location in southern England where the River Thames, flowing from north to south, cuts through and crosses a chalk escarpment in a relatively narrow gap between the Chiltern Hills and the Berkshire Downs. The Gap is approximately 10 miles (16 km) upstream of Reading and 27 miles (43 km) downstream of Oxford. The Gap is named after the town of Goring-on-Thames in Oxfordshire. That town is on the east bank of the river at Goring Gap, and Streatley (in Berkshire) is immediately opposite, on the west bank.

At Goring Gap, the Thames is at an altitude of about 45 metres. The ground rises steeply on either side, reaching 100 metres within a kilometre to the east and west, and continuing to higher ground at around 160 metres.

The Chalk has proved to be relatively more resistant to erosion than adjacent geological formations, so the relief of land to the north and south-east of the Gap is notably less marked. In particular, there is a low-lying Gault clay vale either side of Dorchester (to the north), and a broad, low-lying London Clay zone in the London Basin beyond Reading (to the south-east).

Although this configuration - of a major river slicing through chalk hills, with extensive areas of lower-lying land on either side - is not found in this precise fashion elsewhere in the Chiltern Hills, it is found at a number of locations in the North Downs and South Downs; for example, where the North Downs are crossed by the River Wey at Guildford and by the River Mole near Dorking.

History of R Thames from Eocene. Link to Ancestral Thames. Course prior to Pleistocene not known exactly. The beds over which it flowed, and any deposits which it may have left, have been removed by erosion.

But known with certainty that thames has been flowing at goring from at least Westland Gravel times - 1.5Ma? - with that gravel above on either side (at c160m?) (Footnote? that altitude and that of the thames today, not necessairly that asl at time WG laid down. Very probably lower then, with the land having risen since (link(s) and ref(s)).)

In fact prior to that the river may have been flowing on a course somewhat to the NE - through Stoke row, where deposits laid down by Thames at an earlier time have been identified. That is an fairly isolated outcrop, and the line of the thames at that time is not clear. But if it did enter the L Basin near SRow at that time, it would have moved SW to Goring over a period of time which may have been c0.5Ma (MIS's). (Footnote - Nettlebed - maybe thames a little further to NE even earlier; but the thames-nature of these deposits have been challenged (ref).)

At WestlandG time, it is thought that the thames had its headwaters somewhere in N Wales; then flowed south through the Midlands, crossed what are now the Cotswolds, then followed roughly the line of today's Evenlode, to enter the LBasin at Goring. Then it turned NE, leaving deposits which have been identified near MaRLOW (A Hill?), at Essenden, then WGreen near Bishops Stortford. It continued into the NSea basin beyond Norfolk. So it was a much longer river than today's Thames.

The extent and course of the Thames have been considerably changed in certain places during the past 1.5Ma. In particular, it lost its headwaters north of the cotswolds - possibly as a result of the Anglian glaciation about 450K years ago. That glaciation was certainly responsible for a major change in the river's course in the London Basin, where the ice advance to Watford forced the river, which had formerly flowed along the line of the Vale of St albans, to take a more southerly course towards the North Sea, approximately along its present line.

However, the course of the Thames at Goring Gap has stayed the same during the past 1.5Ma. Ice sheets from the north never reached as far south as Goring. The river here has simply cut down progressively to its current altitude, with the relief in the vicinity of the gap, as elsewhere in many parts of Britain, becoming more progressively pronounced as the quaternary, with its alternating glacial and inter-glacial periods, has proceeded.


Goring Gap Wiki page content to 2024-01-16:

The Goring Gap is the narrow valley, occupied by the River Thames, between the Chiltern Hills and the Berkshire Downs. It is approximately 10 miles (16 km) upstream of Reading and 27 miles (43 km) downstream of Oxford. The river here delimits Berkshire from Oxfordshire. The village of Goring, on the Oxfordshire side of the Thames, gives its name to the gap.

Formation

Elevation: slope map with the Goring Gap in the southwest (bottom left) between the white hills. Click for broader map and to enable varied magnification.

Half a million years ago the chalk hills mentioned formed a continuous escarpment, thus the Thames flowed northeastwards to reach the North Sea sharing the catchment of the Great Ouse. A headwater of the latter still comes within 2 miles (3.2 km) of low-gradient Thames tributary the Cherwell in an almost flat landscape. During maxima of the recent ice ages, the plain of the lower course froze, leaving all of northern England covered in ice sheets. The sheets grew to reach a likely previous escape, an overflow via the deep valleys of the Bulbourne-Gade, upper Colne, Stort and Stour. The Thames was thus halted, in a lake submerging the plain of Oxford: a winter-frozen but summer-thawed type. This eventually became so high that it overtopped the escarpment and cut a new route through the chalk, creating the Goring Gap.

Since the ice sheets receded, the Thames has continued its new course – that is, one through Berkshire, to soon meet the River Kennet which had already carved out the lower Thames valley.[1]

Context and localities

The Goring Gap constricts the Thames, narrowing the otherwise broad valley. Downstream lower hills almost face each other at Henley-on-Thames.

Steep hills rise southwards to Lardon Chase, the nearest section of the Berkshire Downs while the Chiltern Hills rise to the north. The twin villages of Goring and Streatley face each other at the heart of the gap.[2][3] The Thames Path local section between Reading and Oxford, and the Ridgeway (local successor to the Icknield Way) cross the Thames here.

The Goring Gap forms an important communications and transportation corridor. Besides the river itself, which is now limited to navigation for leisure purposes, the gap accommodates the A329 road linking Reading and Oxford, along with the Great Western Main Line railway from London to Bristol and South Wales.[4]

Gallery

View over tree-covered hills on a sunny evening. Houses of a large settlement are visible between the trees.
The Goring Gap on a summer's evening from Lardon Chase

References

  1. ^ Michael J Crawley. "Geology and Soils" (PDF). Imperial College. Archived from the original (PDF) on 30 June 2007. Retrieved 21 March 2007.
  2. ^ "GEOGRAPHY & GEOLOGY". Visit Goring and Streatley. Retrieved 23 January 2016.
  3. ^ "The Goring Gap". Save the Goring Gap. Retrieved 23 January 2016.
  4. ^ Sir A. STRAHAN, K.B.E., F.R.S. (1924). "THE GEOLOGY OF THE THAMES VALLEY NEAR GORING, as illustrated by the Model in the Museum of Practical Geology". Reports & Proceedings—Geologists Association. Mem. Geol. Surv. 63 (1): 43. doi:10.1017/S0016756800002429. Retrieved 23 January 2016.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)

External links

51°31′23″N 01°08′30″W / 51.52306°N 1.14167°W / 51.52306; -1.14167