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An Excellent location, you can find almost anything, Ammonites, Shells, Belemnites, Reptiles (such as Ichthyosaurs), Echinoid's and more from the Boulder Clay and Mammalian and Bird Remains from the Forest Bed during scouring conditions.


Ramsholt is one of the best locations for fossils in Suffolk yielding Sharks Teeth, Lobsters, Fruit, shells from the London clay, Shells, Sharks teeth from the Red Crag, Corals, Echinoid's, from the Coralline and Complete Crabs, fish remains, Sharks teeth from the basement Bed.


Rich Inland Red Crag Pit, a vast variety of shells along with Sharks Teeth and Rays. An excellent location for any keen crag collector.


Levington is a location along the River Orwell where London Clay is exposed in large cliffs and on the foreshore. Levington has yielded a large number of reptile remains including one complete skeleton.


It has only been in recent years that Bawdsey is once again being washed out by the sea, but this time it is a small cliff North of the famous (now overgrown) 'Red Crag' cliffs. London clay on the foreshore is rich in fish, bird and shark.


At Easton Wood Cliffs, rich Shell Beds yield a wide range of shells, fish, bird and small mammal remains. There are six shell beds in total, during extreme scours which occur on average once every 10 years, the highly rich bone bearing bed yields many mammal remains.


At Easton Bavents, rich Shell Beds yield a wide range of shells, fish, bird and small mammal remains, the Easton Bavents Stone Layer yields a wide range of mammalian remains including deer, mammoth, horse, walrus and whale.


The disused part of Wangford Quarry has very thick Norwich Crag Shell Beds, these run for several meters packed with a vast number of various mollusc species and small mammal remains. Below this Larger mammal bones have been found.


The disused quarry contains good sections of the Chalky Boulder Clay, seen at Pakefield and Corton. The rain washes fossils out of the beds, and you can find ammonites, belemnites and if lucky, reptile remains on the surface of the exposures.


Very little is known about the Covehithe Shell Beds, exposed on rare occasions. It is believed that they are a rear mollusc deposit within the Baventian stage. Other Fossils such as Echinoid's and Corals can be found in the Glacial Pebble Deposits.


Nacton Shore is a location along the River Orwell where London Clay is exposed in a small cliff and on the foreshore. Nacton Shore and Levington area has yielded a large number of reptile remains including one complete skeleton.


Along the river Stour, Pleistocene cliffs at Stutton Ness yield the bones of mammoths and deer, whilst foreshore exposures of Eocene London clay yield a wide variety of fossil seeds.


This is a new fossil yielding location, only recently exposed. During scouring conditions, Coralline Crag exposed below beach level yields hard blocks full of shells, echinoids, bryozoans and corals.


Once a famous location for Boulder Clay Fossils such as Ammonites and Ichthyosaurs and rich in Mammal remains from the Forest Bed, since the building of a sea defence, very little is found apart form ammonites after heavy rainfall.


The Glacial Pebble Beds at Benacre yield a range of derived fossils including echinoid's, sponges, shells and belemnites. At the base of the cliff, the Baventian Clay is several metres thick.


Below the Glacial Beds at Dunwich Cliffs begins the Norwich Crag. During Scouring Conditions, Mammal Remains can be found below beach level, bones can also be found after storms washed up. Dunwich hasn't scoured for many years.


Thorington Pit is now disused, the Westleton Beds sometimes yield the bones of large mammals. Glacial beds can also yield fossils such as shells etc especially on the surface.



Suffolk

Fossils are common
Fossils often found
Fossils are not common
Fossils rarely found
Site protected, no collecting permitted, or no access to beach

Quaternary
Neogene
Palaeogene

Cretaceous
Jurassic
Triassic
Permian
Carboniferous
Devonian
Silurian
Ordovician
Cambrian / Pre Cambrian

A-Z Listing

Fossil Resources

Beginners Guides to Fossil Hunting

Fossils collected direct from cliff face
Fossils collected from the foreshore
Fossils collected from the cliff and foreshore
Location is a quarry or pit
Fossils collected from a stream or river bed,
Fossils collected from a farm field
Fossils collected from road or railway cutting.
Fossils collected from hill or mountain scree slope.
Fossils collected from rock outcrops.
Fossils collected from lake or reservoir banks.
Samples taken back for processing microfossils.

Museums and Places to visit

Southwold Museum
The museum of Southwold contains a range of various exibits including fossil bones from Easton, Local History and much more. The building itself is steeped in history, and is a grade 2 listed building. It has a Dutch gable end, built around the second half of the seventeenth century, being last inhabited in 1931. The building was renovated and opened on the 1st June 1933 as the Southwold Museum, and holds much to admire of the local and national history. Fossils, flints, commemorative medals, ships figureheads, porcelain, the battle of solebay and the Southwold railway are all featured. The museum can be found in Victoria Street, near to Bartholomew Green.

Open daily from Easter to September: 14.00 - 16.00 Additional for August: 10.30 - 12.00, and 14.00 - 16.00 Admission Free.

Lowestoft Museum
Broad House, Nicholas Everitt Park, Oulton Broad, Lowestoft NR33 9JR, Suffolk, Collection details: Archaeology, Costume and Textiles, Decorative and Applied Art, Fine Art, Natural Sciences, Medicine, Coins and Medals, Archives, Science and Technology, Social History, Maritime

Amber Museum, Southwold
The Amber Museum .. A purpose built museum dedicated to the history of Amber. Examples of amber from around the world may be found, different colours, with a variety of exhibits containing fossilised creatures trapped within. The Amber museum is located at the rear of the Amber shop in the Market place, opposite the Swan hotel.

Woodbridge Museum

5A, Market Hill, Woodbridge, IP12 4LP, Suffolk Collection details: Archaeology, Costume and Textiles, Fine Art, Natural Sciences, Personalities, Archives, Social History, Land Transport. 01394 386502/972.

Open: Easter-October - Thurs-Sat 1000-1600 Sun 1430-1630 July-August: Mon-Sat 1000-1600 Sun 1430-1630

Sutton Hoo
2 ml east of Woodbridge on B1083, Station: Melton 1½ml Woodbridge, IP12 3DJ, Suffolk, England, Collection details: Archaeology. 01394 389700 Open: 2004

Opening times: March 20 - 30: September Daily 10.00 am to 5.00 pm. Oct 1 - Oct 31: Wed - Sun 10.00 am - 5.00 pm Nov 1 - 31 Dec: Fri, Sat, Sun 10.00 am - 4.00 pm Jan 1 - Feb 28 2005: Sat, Sun 10.00 am - 4.00 pm


Laxfield & District Museum
The Guildhall, High Street, Laxfield, Woodbridge
IP13 8DU, Suffolk: Collection details: Archaeology, Costume and Textiles, Natural Sciences, Archives, Social History. 01986 798421.


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