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To your right
you can see the Abbey on the hill. There's quite a steep slope leading
up away from the flood plain to the Abbey and the rest of the city, although
it's quite hard to see this through the trees.
But behind
you and to your left, there's a much gentler slope on the southern side
of the valley.
Why?
The reason for this is that most of the shaping of the valley occurred
under very cold conditions, during the Pleistocene period.
This period
dates back from about one to two million years ago, although the last
really cold period was just before around 10,000 years ago.
But that
had lasted for at least 20,000 years and had occurred on and off for around
100,000 years! And if that kind of timescale makes your head spin - let's
just say it was a very long time ago!
Under these
cold conditions, there were freezing temperatures throughout the winter
but it was often quite warm in the summer, although not as warm as it
gets now.
The ground
would freeze to a depth of 50 or 100m so the whole of the upper part of
the chalk would be frozen and therefore become impermeable by water.
Erosion
Nowadays, when rain falls, it percolates into the ground and falls into
the ground water within the chalk. But under these cold conditions, the
water couldn't get into the ground, so it ran over the ice instead and
created valleys like this one by erosion.
And under
these conditions, the northern slopes, which face south or south west,
like the one that the Abbey sits at the top of, get more sunshine than
the southern sides of the valley facing north or north east, like the
one behind you.
When the
sun hit the ice, the permafrost layer would melt and sludge down the valley
because it becomes saturated. And because it sees more sunshine, this
process occurs much more strongly on the north side of the valley making
it less stable.
A lot of
ground material would also be carried down the slope with the melt water
and as it did so it would tend to undercut the less stable northern slope
and transport soil down the slope.
But the southern
slopes would tend to remain stable and would be covered by a soil layer
that wasn't transported anywhere as rapidly.
So, under
these conditions you develop an asymmetry of the valley, with the southern
slope being rather less steep than the northern slope going up to the
abbey.
You can see
also see this on Holywell Hill (Stage
11) which is a much steeper slope than St Stephen's Hill on the
south side of the valley, that Holywell Hill runs into.
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