The Hampshire Basin is the traditional name for the landward section of a basin underlying the northern English Channel and much of central southern England, known more fully as the Hampshire-Dieppe Basin. It stretches a little over 100 miles (160 km) from the Dorchester area in the west to Beachy Head in the east. Its southern boundary is marked by a monocline, the Purbeck Monocline, resulting in a near-vertical chalk ridge which forms the Purbeck Hills of Dorset, running under the sea from Old Harry Rocks to The Needles and the central spine of the Isle of Wight and continuing under the English Channel as the Wight-Bray monocline. The northern limit is the chalk of the South Downs, Salisbury Plain and Cranborne Chase. The basin at its widest is around 30 miles (48 km), north-west to south-east, between Salisbury and Newport, Isle of Wight. The area west of the River Avon is usually known as the Poole Basin.[citation needed]
The Hampshire Basin has no single dominant river. In former times the Frome and Solent rivers would have drained much of the basin from west to east, fed by tributaries flowing from the north and south.[1][2] At the end of the last ice age this system was disrupted by rising sea levels, which separated the Isle of Wight from the mainland. Today the western part of the basin drains via the rivers Frome and Piddle into Poole Harbour, and via the Stour and Avon directly to the English Channel. The central part drains into the Solent (directly or via Southampton Water), through the Lymington River, Test, Itchen, Meon, Hamble, Western Yar, Medina and Eastern Yar. The eastern part of the basin is a narrow coastal plain draining into the many harbours via small streams, and is crossed by larger rivers draining the Weald including the Arun and Adur.
Geology
The main basin consists of an asymmetric syncline in the Cretaceous chalk, with a gentle dip southwards from Salisbury Plain terminating abruptly at a near vertical monocline in the south. The chalk surface dips from around 170 metres (560 ft) above sea level west of Winchester to 600 metres (2,000 ft) below sea level at Newport,[3] before rising abruptly to around 200 metres (660 ft) above sea level in parts of the central hills of the Isle of Wight and the Purbeck Hills. The chalk can be visualised as a thin layer draped over rigid blocks of older rocks at depth, which have moved vertically due to the Alpine Orogeny.
Beneath the chalk the geology is complex. It is believed that a series of major blocks separated by faults trending NW-SE is fragmented into smaller blocks by numerous east-west trending faults; one such block acts as a trap for the Wytch Farmoil field. These blocks have moved vertically relative to each other during late Palaeozoic and Mesozoic times, resulting in considerable variations in the thickness of the various formations deposited over them before the chalk. Rocks of Lower Greensand (Aptian) age were deposited over an eroded surface, which ranges from Great Oolite (Early JurassicBathonian) to Weald Clay (mid-Cretaceous Hauterivian) in age.[4] The chalk itself varies considerably in thickness, with the results of a marine transgression progressing across into Dorset from the east. There is evidence that the top of the Upper Greensand to the west is the same age as the oldest chalk in the Isle of Wight.[3]
The simple basin structure is complicated by localised folding. A smaller outcrop of Palaeocene and Eocene deposits occurs in a small syncline to the south-east of Salisbury.[6] An anticline to the north of Portsmouth results in the significant chalk ridge of Portsdown Hill within the younger sediments; the London Clay to the north contains the Forest of Bere.[7] A similar structure further east causes chalk to outcrop between Bognor Regis and Worthing, separated from the chalk of the South Downs by a belt of Reading Beds and London Clay continuing from Havant through Chichester and south of Arundel to the coast at Lancing.
It is likely that the London and Hampshire basins were initially part of a single larger area of deposition covering the whole of southeast England during the Palaeocene. The two basins were progressively separated by the emergence of the Weald-Artois Anticline during the Eocene. By the Oligocene the London Basin was wholly dry land, and only a small part of the Hampshire Basin, centred on the modern Solent, was an area of marine deposition.[8]
See also
Poole Basin - the western part of the Hampshire Basin
^Bird, E (1997), The Shaping of the Isle of Wight, Bradford on Avon:Ex Libris Press, ISBN0-948578-83-1
^ abMelville, R.V. & Freshney E.C (4th Ed 1982), The Hampshire Basin and adjoining areas, British Regional Geology series, Institute of Geological Sciences, London: HMSO, ISBN0-11-884203-X