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 Locality areas
  Cheddar Gorge
 Charterhouse
 Blackdown
 Burrington Combe
 Shipham & Rowberrow
 Crook Peak & Axbridge
 Banwell to Churchill
 Priddy
 Harptree & Smitham Hill
 Draycott & Westbury-sub
 -Mendip
 Wookey Hole & Ebbor
 Gorge
 Wells
 Great Elm & Vallis Vale
 Mells & the Wadbury Valley
 The Vobster area
 The Whatley area
 Torr Works & Asham Wood
 Beacon Hill
 Stoke St Michael & Oakhill
 Holwell & Nunney
 Shepton Mallet & Maesbury
 Gurney Slade & Emborough
 The Nettlebridge valley
 Geology
 Rocks of Mendips
 Fossils
 Geological timescale
 Ancient environments
 Geological structure
 Minerals and mines
  Minerals and mines
 Industrial archaeology
 Quarrying
  Stone as a resource
 Employment & the economy
 Quarrying & geodiversity
 Quarrying & the environment
 History of quarrying
 Caves and karst
 How caves form
 Dry valleys and gorges
 Dolines and sinkholes
 Mendip caves
 Going caving
 Hydrogeology
 Biodiversity
  Flora and fauna
 Typical Mendip habitats
 Special Mendip habitats
 Horseshoe bats
 Appendix of names
 Biodiversity of western
 Mendip
 Biodiversity of eastern
 Mendip
 External links
 Detailed site information
  Coal mining
  Mendip quarry companies
  East Mendip quarries
 Biodiversity of eastern
 Mendip
  West Mendip quarries
 Biodiversity of western
 Mendip
 Acknowledgements
 Site map
Geology and biodiversity
Limestone cliffs and crags are natural rock gardens, with lime-loving plants rooted in cracks and tiny pockets of soil. In addition to the species found in the limestone grassland, the rock outcrops also support a number of rarities, such as Cheddar Pink (Dianthus gratianopolitanus), and Slender Bedstraw (Galium pumilum).

At the other end of the soil spectrum, well-drained brown or red podzolic soils derived from the underlying Devonian sandstone support acid dwarf shrub heath, acid grassland, bracken and gorse scrub. These soils are nutrient-poor and free-draining, and typically very acidic, so a different set of soil nutrients is rendered unavailable to plants. Many species that are typical of heathland are adapted to very dry conditions, for example, heathers possess tiny, or needle-like leaves, and are capable of making their own nitrogen through fungal partners in their roots.

  The nationally rare Cheddar Pink Dianthus gratianopolitanus.
The nationally rare Cheddar pink Dianthus gratianopolitanus.
Sandstone heath, Blackdown

Upland heath developed on the Devonian Old Red Sandstone, Blackdown. The soils here are thin, nutrient poor podzols with common ling, bilberry and bell heather.
  Grimmia donniana , a lead tolerant moss growing on lead-rich slag from the 19th century mining operations at Charterhouse.


Grimmia donniana, a lead tolerant moss growing on lead-rich slag from the 19th century mining operations at Charterhouse. The white patch is the lichen Ochrolechia parella, sometimes called the 'crab-eye lichen', which is common on siliceous rocks. Ubley Warren.

More extreme pressure is exerted on vegetation when the soils contain high levels of toxins. Around many of the old lead and zinc mine workings, the soils contain high levels of lead, cadmium and especially zinc, that are toxic to most plants. In addition, these areas tend to be very drought-prone in summer, and hold few nutrients. Only a few, very stress-tolerant species are able to withstand such hostile conditions, and as a result these often very local sites support a highly distinctive flora. Early colonisers of such sites can accumulate remarkably high concentrations of zinc without harm.
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