The Belemnite Marls of Charmouth, a Series in the Lias of the Dorset Coast

Abstract
Anyone standing on the beach between Charmouth and Lyme, and looking up at the bluffs and precipices of Black Ven, is struck by the contrast between the pale, blue-grey colour of the third, and highest, Lias precipice and the deeper shade of the underlying Black Marl. These pale marls, about 75 feet thick, soon pass off the eastern shoulder of Black Ven, but are readily picked up again as the eye follows the line of stratification eastwards, and across the valley, to Stonebarrow Cliff. There the pale marls make the second precipice, but soon dip to the beach to form most of the long, low cliff reaching from Westhay to the Ridge fault.