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Kimmeridge Bay

Bays of DorsetEngvarB from May 2016Isle of PurbeckJurassic CoastKimmeridgian
Kimmeridge Bay, cliff geograph.org.uk 1411669
Kimmeridge Bay, cliff geograph.org.uk 1411669

Kimmeridge Bay ( ) is a bay on the Isle of Purbeck, a peninsula on the English Channel coast in Dorset, England, close to and southeast of the village of Kimmeridge, on the Smedmore Estate. The area is renowned for its fossils, with The Etches Collection in the village of Kimmeridge displaying fossils found by Steve Etches in the area over a 30-year period. It is a popular place to access the coast for tourists. To the east are the Kimmeridge Ledges, where fossils can be found in the flat clay beds.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Kimmeridge Bay (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Kimmeridge Bay
Smedore & Swalland Private Road,

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Wikipedia: Kimmeridge BayContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 50.6123647 ° E -2.13009631 °
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Address

Smedore & Swalland Private Road
BH20 5PE , Kimmeridge
England, United Kingdom
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Kimmeridge Bay, cliff geograph.org.uk 1411669
Kimmeridge Bay, cliff geograph.org.uk 1411669
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Nearby Places

Steeple, Dorset
Steeple, Dorset

Steeple is a hamlet and former civil parish, now in the civil parish of Steeple with Tyneham, in the Purbeck district of the English county of Dorset. It is situated 8 miles (13 km) west of the coastal resort town of Swanage at the foot of Ridgeway Hill. In 2013 the estimated population of the civil parish was 60. The civil parish was abolished on 1 April 2014 and merged with Tyneham to form Steeple with Tyneham.The Gerrard family of Longhide were the principal landowners here fromb the fourteenth to the sixteenth century; the lands then passed by inheritance to the Napier family. The ancient Norman church of Steeple, dedicated to St Michael and All Angels, lacks a steeple. It has a coat of arms engraved in stone in the porch and another painted in scarlet of the roof interior that is precisely the same as George Washington's coat of arms, showing stars and stripes. The Washington arms is quartered with those of the squires of Steeple village, the Lawrence family, who are allied with the Washingtons by the marriage of one of its sons, Edmund Lawrence, to Agnes de Wessington in 1390. The flag of the US capital hangs inside the church, presented on 25 July 1977 by Walter E Washington, Mayor of Washington DC from 2 January 1975 - 2 January 1979 On the highest local point of the nearby Purbeck Ridge is an 18th-century folly built by the former owner of Creech Grange and known as Grange Arch. Today it is a Grade II listed building owned by the National Trust.