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Survey Details for CRDGNGL217 - 2026-06-04

CRDGNGL217

Geological Landscape

Camddwi Fach - Sychant

Ceredigion

2008-12-30

  • Level 1: Lowland hills and valleys
  • Level 2: Lowland glacial and fluvioglacial depositional terrain
  • Level 3: Lowland till plain / field

Monitoring

Q1 - Date of monitoring?

  • No Answer

Q1a - Monitoring undertaken by

  • No Answer

Q1b - Has this record been updated following monitoring work?

  • No Answer

Q1c - Change indicated by

  • No Answer

Q1d - What has changed?

  • No Answer

Q1e - Has the information ever been verified in the field?

  • No

Q2 - Does this area have a special or functional link with an adjacent area?

  • No Answer

Description

Q3 - If Classification is "Other", specify here

  • Empty value

Q4 - What is the geographical and topographical character of this area?

  • Low, level to very gently sloping glacial clay (Quaternary, Pleistocene) filled depressions between bedrock massifs to the N of the Cors Caron Includes the Camddwr Fach valley and the upper part of the Sychnant valley.

Q4a - Where bedrock dominated, what is the dominant bedrock type?

  • No Answer

Q4b - Where bedrock dominated, what is the age that characterises the aspect area?

  • No Answer

Q4c - Where bedrock dominated, what is the major rock lithogy (-ies)?

  • No Answer

Q4d - Where drift dominated, what is the dominant drift deposit?

  • Glacial

Q4e - Where drift dominated, what is the major sediment that characterises the area?

  • Boulder clay/till

Q5 - What is the characteristic Level 3 component of the area?

  • Lowland till plain / field

Q6 - Which of the following is a significant contributor to the geological character of the area?

  • Superficial deposits
    • Glacial till dominates [QUATERNARY, PLEISTOCENE].
  • Active processes
    • Stream, bog
  • Past processes
    • Glacial

Q7 - What additional subsidiary Level 3 components are notable?

  • No Answer

Q8 - What Level 4 components are notable in this area?

  • Slope

Q9 - What active geological and geomorphological processes are significant in this area?

  • Stream, bog
  • Empty value

Q10 - Are there components of significant hydrological importance?

  • Yes
    • Stream, bog

Q11 - Are there any pedological processes that are significant in the area or have had a landscape forming effect?

  • Not known

Q12 - Is there current mineral extraction?

  • No

Q13 - Has there been mineral extraction in the past?

  • Not known

Q14 - Are there SSSI/GCR sites here?

  • No

Q15 - Are there geological SINC, 2nd tier, or RIGS sites in the area?

  • No

Condition

Q16 - Value

  • Moderate
    • No regionally significant sites/ landforms noted during present survey and geology/ geomorphology considered to be typical of feature/ process and is either widespread, better exposed elsewhere or not currently known to be exceptional.

Q17 - Condition

  • Good
    • Rural area with no significant development.

Q18 - Trend

  • Constant
    • Rural area with no significant development.

Recommendations

Q19 - Existing management

  • Generally Appropriate

Q20 - Existing management remarks:

  • Rural area with no significant development.

Q21 - Principal management recommendations

  • Ensure that no features or natural systems of geological or geomorphological significance in the area are lost or damaged (e.g. due to development or forestry).

Q22 - Guideline

  • Long Term
    • Ensure that no features or natural systems of geological or geomorphological significance in the area are lost or damaged (e.g. due to development or forestry).

Tolerance To Change

Q23 - Are there any significant threats to the current integrity and condition of the Earth Heritage features of the area?

  • Not known

Aspect Area Boundary

Q24 - To what level was this information site-surveyed?

  • Level 3

Q25 - At 1:10,000, how much of the Aspect Area boundary is precise?

  • Most
    • Aspect Area boundaries surveyed at 1:10,000 using aerial photographs, mapped at 1:25,000.

Q26 - What baseline information source was used for Aspect Area boundary mapping?

  • Other
    • 1:50,000 British Geological Survey maps, 1:10,000 aerial photographs (as stereo pairs), OS 1:25,000 Landranger topographical map.

Q27 - If OS Data was used, what was the scale?

  • 1:10,000 and 1:25,000

Q28 - What is the justification for the Aspect Area boundaries?

  • Break of slope at edge of drift filled valley systems and valley sides / escarpment above.

Evaluation

Q29 - Evaluation Criteria: Research Value

  • Moderate
    • No regionally significant sites/ landforms noted during present survey and geology/ geomorphology considered to be typical of feature/ process and is either widespread, better exposed elsewhere or not currently known to be exceptional.

Q29a - Evaluation Criteria: Educational Value

  • Low
    • No regionally significant sites/ landforms noted during present survey and geology/ geomorphology considered to be typical of feature/ process and is either widespread, better exposed elsewhere or not currently known to be exceptional.

Q30 - Evaluation Criteria: Historical Value

  • Moderate
    • No regionally significant sites/ landforms noted during present survey and geology/ geomorphology considered to be typical of feature/ process and is either widespread, better exposed elsewhere or not currently known to be exceptional.

Q31 - Evaluation Criteria: Rarity / Uniqueness

  • Moderate
    • No regionally significant sites/ landforms noted during present survey and geology/ geomorphology considered to be typical of feature/ process and is either widespread, better exposed elsewhere or not currently known to be exceptional.

Q32 - Evaluation Criteria: Classic Example

  • Moderate
    • No regionally significant sites/ landforms noted during present survey and geology/ geomorphology considered to be typical of feature/ process and is either widespread, better exposed elsewhere or not currently known to be exceptional.

Q33 - Evaluation Criteria: Overall Evaluation

  • Moderate
    • No regionally significant sites/ landforms noted during present survey and geology/ geomorphology considered to be typical of feature/ process and is either widespread, better exposed elsewhere or not currently known to be exceptional.

Q34 - Justification of overall evaluation

  • Empty value

Bibliography

Q35 - Sources and additional assessments

  • BRITISH GEOLOGICAL SURVEY 1994, Sheet 178 1:50 000 Geological Series; DAVIES, J.R. et al. 1997, Memoir of the British Geological Survey, Sheets 178 and 179, BGS. ORDNANCE SURVEY 2005c, Explorer Map 199 (1:25, 000).

Assessment

Q36 - Additional Assessments

  • Empty value

Q37 - Additional Comments

  • Additional Level 4 features include: Stream; Marsh/bog/fen