4 February 1287
Five thousand years ago, in an area of sea that is today Rye Bay, we would have found offshore barrier beaches that were constantly
shifting with the insistence of the sea. Over several thousand years this
shingle was moved and deposited in stages eastwards and started to accumulate
on tidal sands. Each mini era of activity formed shingle ridges, mimicking the
waves they had been sculpted by, and within each peak and swell was laid bare
the genesis of the place that would later be called Dungeness. As much as this
process was a gradual one, at times, during the dark ages, great storms
quickened proceedings, not only reconstructing the shoreline with brutal
immediacy but also altering the flow of the nearby rivers. The area inland from
all of this activity was a volatile place as well, what with the rising of the
landmass, formation of marshland and periodic inundation of the sea. Man also
played his part in altering the landscape to serve his needs, draining to
create fertile farmland and the building of sea walls to protect these precious
gains from the very element he had stolen them from.
However, the beach has not finished forming. Its western shoreline wants to migrate northwards and eastwards,
while the east of the peninsula feels compelled to head towards the southeast.
Standing on this land is taking a ride on a slow – a very slow – geological
rollercoaster. And so the beach shifts and grows, and extends much further inland than
most other beaches dare venture. Man has tried to halt its advance as much as
the sea throws the loose shingle back on dry land. The only position
to be taken, from which to appreciate the size of the beach is from the air. And once there, the scale of the work of the sea can be admired and even feared.
4 February 1287. Even today, meteorologists refer to this date as the day on which one of the fiercest
storms ever recorded took hold of this remote corner of England and throttled it.
There were portents – a red moon that shone a sickly light
over the shingle shoals and marshland; a relentless gale force wind that
refused to subside; a flooding high tide that allowed no ebb between its next,
equally high incursion and mountainous waves that crested with thick white
spume.
The marauding sea tore across the beaches and temporarily
took back the marshes far inland. Two sleepy coastal hamlets were cast aside
and dragged down into a watery grave.
Such was the force of the storm that enormous quantities of
shingle were ripped from the peninsula, and, together with mud and soil from
the hinterland, were transported northwards, to be dumped, a few miles away and with little
ceremony, at the feet and over the ankles of the inhabitants of the busy port of New Romney. This harbour silted up in a matter of hours and was
sealed from the sea forever; the land level rose by five inches in a day; the River Rother, which exited from here into the English Channel found itself dramatically
diverted over 15 miles to the west. Overnight this bustling port found itself a
mile from the sea that had, until the day before, lapped against its streets. Dungeness had, in affect, killed off the port. But the beach still remained, albeit
cruelly scoured by the storm. It was a day that irrevocably changed the geology
of the area.
In this day and age, the shingle seems to be a benign place. But it is still moving. The weather can still be an influence. We walk and bird in an unpredictable place.
(I will not be staying at the observatory for the planned month, but may be able to get down there for the odd day in early November. The North Downs will act as a substitute shingle!)
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