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On this part
of the walk you can either keep to the concrete path or walk on the flood
plain grass itself - an area that is widely used by the public.
This area
is the flood plain of the River Ver, but although it's difficult to imagine,
the river used to flow right through where you are walking.
Up until
a few hundred years ago, it was much wider and probably shallower as well,
but since that time, humans have dug it into deeper ditches and moved
it for industrial use to work their water mills.
It is thought
that the first human impact was by the Romans, just under 2,000 years
ago, who moved the river to use it as a mill stream for what is now the
Abbey Mills, which you will see later on the walk. Before that it was
a bit of a swamp.
Currently
it's pushed right over into the far corner of the valley floor. If you
stand and face the Abbey, it runs in a channel where the trees start and
the grass finishes. You can walk across to see it, but there will be other
chances to do this further on in the walk.
The underlying
rock where you are walking is chalk and the River Ver is what is known
as a chalk stream. It rises north of Redbourn at Kensworth Lynch and joins
the River Colne at Bricket Wood.
Chalk Streams
are shallow with gravel beds and clear water and are fed from groundwater
which is stored in the layers of chalk underneath which soak up water
like a sponge. At various points the water emerges in the form of springs
which feed the river.
The Ver,
like other chalk streams, has a porus bed which means that water filters
through it and it needs a high water table to exist. The Ver relies on
winter rain percolating through to the chalk below the Chiltern Hills,
but below average rainfall in winter greatly reduces this recharge. With
levels being so low, even heavy rain the following summer will not replenish
underground reserves.
What is
chalk?
The chalk lying beneath your feet, can be dated back 80-100 million years
when the whole of north west Europe was beneath the sea, and was created
by the algae living in the ocean.
The chalk
is composed of little plates formed from the algae, which are known as
coccoliths. These are very pure calcium carbonate, which the algae extract
from the sea water that are then secreted as white calcium carbonate.
So, around
90 million years ago, the area where the city of St Albans now sits was,
like most of southern Britain, under the sea. But between that time and
around 2 million years ago, not much is known about what happened as there
is not much evidence in the form of deposits.
What is known
is that the chalk has been here far longer than the Ver. But this is not
the only river that has run through this area. It is the legacy left by
a far more famous river and maybe, if it wasn't for the ice age, St Albans
may well have been England's capital city!
An alternative
capital
Between 2,000,000 and 450,000 years ago, the River Thames ran through
the vale of St Albans, which is the broad open valley between the hill
that St Albans sits on and several miles to the south where you now find
Radlett and Shenley. i.e. where you are now walking!
Where the
Thames flowed it formed a series of little gravel terraces, because under
the cold conditions of the time, the river was able to transport flints,
coarse cobbles and boulders. This is why this valley floor is still covered
with a thin layer of flints, clays and silts. The much finer material
was carried out to sea - which at that time meant somewhere off the East
Anglian coast, as far up as southern Norfolk!
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If
the Thames hadn't moved, could St Albans have been England's capital
city?
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The Thames'
modern course through London is a diversion, brought about by glaciation
during the Ice Age. The ice covered most of East Anglia, and the tongue
of it came up this old Thames valley just about as far as St Albans. The
limit of the ice is actually marked by a line within 100 metres of the
M1 in the Bricket Wood area. But it is pure coincidence that Britain's
first motorway was built along this line!
The ice blocked
the valley and as a result, the water that couldn't flow through it created
a large lake to the south and west of St Albans. This overflowed, creating
channels that went from little valley to little valley as you go eastwards.
The new course caused by the lake's overflow created a new route for the
Thames which is the one that we now know.
The River
Ver was therefore originally a tributary of the old Thames, running down
a valley from the north of it, to the south east.
The Ver runs
in a south-easterly direction because the underlying rock slopes gently
down to the south east. The main rock stratum is chalk, which forms the
Chiltern Hills in the north. This rock then goes underneath London, which
is a big basin, and comes up again south of our capital city to form the
north downs.
The River
Ver starts in the Chilterns, and runs through Verulamium Park, and on
to the east of St Albans when it suddenly makes a sharp angular bend to
the south. This is because half a million years ago the ice blocked its
exit and the river was forced to flow along the margin of the ice. That
course has been retained today.
The flood
plain you are now on does occasionally flood, especially if there is a
big storm. But the amount of water coming down the river is fairly strictly
controlled, partly by the fact that higher up the Ver, pumping stations
take water from the chalk which prevents too much water getting into the
river.
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