Periglacial discontinuities observed in Jurassic mudstones between Buckinghamshire and Warwickshire
Periglacial discontinuities observed in Jurassic mudstones between Buckinghamshire and Warwickshire
Evidence for periglacial weathering in the shallow subsurface is widespread throughout the lowland southern British Isles. However, the geological indicators can be quite subtle and not always apparent during ground investigation. Narrow (0.3 – 0.6 m wide) trial pit excavations are a cost-effective way to investigate periglacial discontinuities, but they can mechanically disturb the ground and obscure the geometry of small-scale features. The aim of this study was to identify and record discontinuities, including relict shear surfaces in periglacially affected ground along the route of the HS2 railway between Wendover in Buckinghamshire and Southam in Warwickshire. Five case studies in full-scale earthwork excavations show that observed sheared surfaces occurred at a range of scales between millimetres to single discontinuities with a persistence of 10 or more metres. All individual discontinuities occurred within fields of disturbed ground extending up to hundreds of metres. The observations show that the Spink (1991) schema developed for Eocene clays is broadly applicable to Jurassic-aged mudstone strata examined across an extensive length of excavations (~60 km).
Hemmings, Giles
3710891a-3fbd-486c-b31b-fbcbc0605e25
Briggs, Kevin
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Saroglou, Harry
dfa2bc37-2a16-4abb-996a-d54ecfd9e3a7
Raven, Kevin
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Butler, Simon
94228dc1-0582-4a2e-831d-fc7c991d09cc
19 April 2026
Hemmings, Giles
3710891a-3fbd-486c-b31b-fbcbc0605e25
Briggs, Kevin
8974f7ce-2757-4481-9dbc-07510b416de4
Saroglou, Harry
dfa2bc37-2a16-4abb-996a-d54ecfd9e3a7
Raven, Kevin
1bc1d987-ad84-4de9-8868-d657e2fe1afd
Butler, Simon
94228dc1-0582-4a2e-831d-fc7c991d09cc
Hemmings, Giles, Briggs, Kevin, Saroglou, Harry, Raven, Kevin and Butler, Simon
(2026)
Periglacial discontinuities observed in Jurassic mudstones between Buckinghamshire and Warwickshire.
Quarterly Journal of Engineering Geology and Hydrogeology, 59 (3), [qjegh2025-160].
(doi:10.1144/qjegh2025-160).
Abstract
Evidence for periglacial weathering in the shallow subsurface is widespread throughout the lowland southern British Isles. However, the geological indicators can be quite subtle and not always apparent during ground investigation. Narrow (0.3 – 0.6 m wide) trial pit excavations are a cost-effective way to investigate periglacial discontinuities, but they can mechanically disturb the ground and obscure the geometry of small-scale features. The aim of this study was to identify and record discontinuities, including relict shear surfaces in periglacially affected ground along the route of the HS2 railway between Wendover in Buckinghamshire and Southam in Warwickshire. Five case studies in full-scale earthwork excavations show that observed sheared surfaces occurred at a range of scales between millimetres to single discontinuities with a persistence of 10 or more metres. All individual discontinuities occurred within fields of disturbed ground extending up to hundreds of metres. The observations show that the Spink (1991) schema developed for Eocene clays is broadly applicable to Jurassic-aged mudstone strata examined across an extensive length of excavations (~60 km).
Text
qjegh2025-160
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Accepted/In Press date: 20 March 2026
e-pub ahead of print date: 19 April 2026
Published date: 19 April 2026
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 511680
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/511680
ISSN: 1470-9236
PURE UUID: 729c2639-d50a-4473-b1b8-87732880d992
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Date deposited: 27 May 2026 16:40
Last modified: 28 May 2026 01:42
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Author:
Giles Hemmings
Author:
Kevin Briggs
Author:
Harry Saroglou
Author:
Kevin Raven
Author:
Simon Butler
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