Tucked away in the heart of London's Square Mile, a 150m-year-old ammonite stares out at passersby from between windows of a tapas restaurant. The fossil is nestled in a limestone wall on Plantation Lane alongside remnants of ancient nautiloids and squid-like belemnites - a hidden mineralised aquarium that offers a glimpse into deep time.
Joining Dr Ruth Siddall, a geologist with a passion for urban geology, on one of her walking tours reveals the often-overlooked world of stones that make up our cities. The architecture of central London is, in fact, a largely unwitting showcase of Earth science through the ages. "London is huge," Ruth explains, "but unlike some cities it has no local building stones of its own. It's basically in a basin of clay, so all the stones you see around us have had to come from elsewhere."
The tour begins with York stone - a fine-grained sandstone that was once a prehistoric riverbed, 310m years old and quarried in the Peak District. Alongside it, serpentinite from the Italian Alps and larvikite from Norway are just a few of the many stones on display. At each stop, Ruth points out the unique features and stories behind the stone, revealing the epic journey they took to reach their current location.
A visit to St Paul's Cathedral reveals fossilised orthocones embedded in the limestone exterior of a wine bar - a 150m-year-old vertebrate bone that might be from a pterosaur. Meanwhile, the co-working space on Houndsditch boasts an exterior constructed of gneiss from a meteorite impact crater in South Africa. The stone's surface still bears the patterned veins of black impact glass, carrying traces of extraterrestrial minerals and having originated 6,000 miles away.
This walking tour offers a unique perspective on the city - one that transcends its usual grandeur to reveal the fascinating stories hidden within the stones themselves. And it's an experience that will leave even the most seasoned geology enthusiast in awe.
Joining Dr Ruth Siddall, a geologist with a passion for urban geology, on one of her walking tours reveals the often-overlooked world of stones that make up our cities. The architecture of central London is, in fact, a largely unwitting showcase of Earth science through the ages. "London is huge," Ruth explains, "but unlike some cities it has no local building stones of its own. It's basically in a basin of clay, so all the stones you see around us have had to come from elsewhere."
The tour begins with York stone - a fine-grained sandstone that was once a prehistoric riverbed, 310m years old and quarried in the Peak District. Alongside it, serpentinite from the Italian Alps and larvikite from Norway are just a few of the many stones on display. At each stop, Ruth points out the unique features and stories behind the stone, revealing the epic journey they took to reach their current location.
A visit to St Paul's Cathedral reveals fossilised orthocones embedded in the limestone exterior of a wine bar - a 150m-year-old vertebrate bone that might be from a pterosaur. Meanwhile, the co-working space on Houndsditch boasts an exterior constructed of gneiss from a meteorite impact crater in South Africa. The stone's surface still bears the patterned veins of black impact glass, carrying traces of extraterrestrial minerals and having originated 6,000 miles away.
This walking tour offers a unique perspective on the city - one that transcends its usual grandeur to reveal the fascinating stories hidden within the stones themselves. And it's an experience that will leave even the most seasoned geology enthusiast in awe.