Fully booked: Building Stones of Cambridge: A Geological Walking Tour

16 June 2016 18:30-20:00, Cambridge, United Kingdom


Introduction
The buildings of Cambridge are world famous, both for their architectural splendour and for their historical record of university and town development over 750 years. Walking amongst the city-centre colleges, it is easy to imagine their mellow stone buildings as they were in the Middle Ages, and to visualise the human history that they witnessed. Yet this same stone records another, much longer, history. The common building materials in Cambridge originated in the geological Middle Ages, the Mesozoic Era of one or two hundred million years ago. Older, Late Palaeozoic, rocks are not uncommon, particularly as facing and paving materials. Yet older slates from the Early Palaeozoic, four or five hundred million years old, roof many Cambridge buildings. Viewed with some basic geological knowledge, all these rocks can reveal the natural events which formed them, provide snapshots in the long geological history of Britain, and enrich a purely architectural view of the fine buildings they form.

This walking tour takes in a wide variety of buildings and rock types in a compact area of the city centre. The route involves about a mile and a half of walking.

This tour will explore a different area of the city from the one we explored in 2015.
Tickets are £5 and numbers are very limited so pre-booking is essential.
Speakers
Venue
Cambridge City Centre

meet outside the Round Church, Cambridge City Centre, Cambridge City Centre, Round Church, Cambridge, CB2 1UB, United Kingdom

Committee
  • John O'Toole Hon Secretary and Treasurer, Mid-Anglia Section, United Kingdom

Organised by
Society of Chemical Industry, CaGE Section
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