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The current
building known as Kingsbury Mill was built in the 16th century but a mill
at this location is mentioned in the Domesday Book.
It was modernised
in the 19th century and was a working mill until 1960, powered by the
waters of the Ver.
Geological
puzzle
On the grass at the front of the Mill, you will see what at a quick first
glance looks like a lump of concrete, but it is in fact a large piece
of Hertfordshire Puddingstone.
This rock
is well-known throughout the world, and can ONLY be found in Hertfordshire
with outcrops in some adjacent counties. But, although there are many
theories, nobody really knows why. It's a great geological mystery, so
go and take a closer look!
It just looks
like a lot of ordinary stones stuck together, loosely resembling a fruit
pudding - hence its name! But the geological process that led to this
is evidence that St Albans was once a tropical area!
Hertfordshire
Puddingstone is known as a conglomerate, which means it's composed of
pebbles of an earlier rock type incorporated into finer sediment, in this
case mainly quartz sand. The pebbles in it are flints derived from the
underlying chalk which have been rounded by continually being carried
along in a river.
The unusual
thing about Hertfordshire Puddingstone is that the pebbles have been cemented
together with silica, which is a very hard material. This silica has been
drawn out of the underlying rock by water percolating from the surface
of the earth downwards.
When the
traveling silica found this accumulation of pebbles and sand on its way
down, it was re-deposited as a fine material which invaded all the little
pores between the pebbles and the sand particles and stuck them all together.
But why
did this process only happen around here?
It's actually a bit of a mystery but there are various theories. The silica
must have originally come from soils near the land surface, where the
rainwater percolating through the soil would slowly dissolve the silica
out and carry it downwards.
But that
is a process which is typical of tropical regions, so it must date back
at least 50 or 60 million years ago when the climate in this part of the
world was something near tropical - very different from anything that
we've had since.
Some people
say that the silica was much deeper within the earth's crust so when there
were other layers of sediment deposited above it, perhaps 100 metres thick,
there was a lot of pressure there to assist these chemical changes. But
it's a puzzle!
If you look
at a cross section of the rock, you will see a range of very attractive
colours - bright yellows, browns and bright reds. This is because along
with the silica, iron was also transported through the soil in solution
and also deposited in the rock, creating lovely colours.
It is a very
hard rock and was used by the Romans to grind corn.
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