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River Axe (Lyme Bay)

River in southwest England

River Axe (Lyme Bay)

River in southwest England

FieldValue
nameRiver Axe
name_etymology
imageRiver Axe - geograph.org.uk - 440559.jpg
image_captionThe River Axe near Axminster
mapRiver Axe (Lyme Bay) map.png
map_captionCourse and catchment of the River Axe
pushpin_map_caption
subdivision_type1Country
subdivision_name1England within the United Kingdom
subdivision_type2Counties
subdivision_name2Devon, Dorset and Somerset
subdivision_name5
length35 km
discharge1_max
source1_locationChedington, Dorset
source1_coordinates
mouthLyme Bay, English Channel
mouth_locationSeaton, Devon
mouth_coordinates
tributaries_leftBlackwater River
tributaries_rightRiver Yarty, River Coly
The Axe Estuary near Axmouth

The River Axe is a 22 mi long river in the counties of Dorset, Somerset and Devon, in the south-west of England. It rises in Dorset and flows south to Lyme Bay which it enters through the Axe Estuary in Devon. It is a shallow, non-navigable river, although its mouth at Seaton has some boating activity. The name Axe derives from a Common Brittonic word meaning "abounding in fish", and is cognate with pysg (a variant of pysgod), the Welsh word for fish.

The River Axe rises in several streams to the south of Chedington in Dorset, close to the source of the River Parrett that flows north to the Bristol Channel. The Axe then flows west through Mosterton and Seaborough before turning south and forming the county boundary between Dorset and Somerset. In this section it flows past the villages of Wayford and Winsham, and the former Forde Abbey. At a point some 3 mi north of Axminster it is joined by the Blackwater River and enters the county of Devon. It is then joined by the River Kit, before passing through Axminster after which it is joined by the River Yarty and continues south by the villages of Whitford and Colyford, where it is joined by the River Coly. At this point it spreads out to form the tidal Axe Estuary. The estuary flows past the village of Axmouth, on its eastern bank, before passing through a high shingle bank to the east of the seaside town of Seaton and entering Lyme Bay on the English Channel.

In 1999, a section of the river extending for 13 km—from the confluence with the Blackwater River to Colyford Bridge—was designated a Site of Special Scientific Interest (SSSI) by England's conservation body, Natural England. It was described as supporting "an exceptionally diverse aquatic and marginal flora".

The River Axe estuary near its mouth

Although now shallow and largely unnavigable, the estuary of the Axe was once important for shipping. According to Historic England, the village of Axmouth, which is some 1 mile inland, 'was ranked as a major port by the mid-14th century and accounted for 15% of the country’s shipping trade'. The remains of a late medieval fishing boat can be seen at low tide in the river, just south-west of Axmouth village. Over the following years the estuary silted up and a moving shingle bar formed at the mouth. In 1870 the current Axmouth Harbour was developed at the river mouth. Although the harbour is nearer the town of Seaton than the village of Axmouth, the harbour and all of the estuary are in the parish of Axmouth.

The estuary is flanked to its west by a series of low-level nature reserves, collectively known as Seaton Wetlands and including Seaton Marshes, Black Hole Marsh, Colyford Common and Stafford Marsh. Between them, these reserves include freshwater grazing marshes, intertidal lagoons, scrapes, ditches and bird hides, and are host to a diverse variety of birds and mammals such as otters. The reserves are separated from the estuary by the embankment of the former Seaton branch railway, which now carries the Seaton Tramway on its route between Seaton, Colyford and Colyton. with the open-topped trams offering a good view of both estuary and reserves. To its east, the estuary is flanked by the steeply rising land of the hills behind the Jurassic Coast and the Axmouth to Lyme Regis Undercliff.

Prehistoric archaeology: The Axe valley has produced evidence for some of the earliest human (Palaeolithic) activity in the south-west of England. The Broom gravel pits (near Holditch) produced at least 1,800 Lower Palaeolithic handaxes when they were quarried in the late 19th century and the 1930s and 1940s. More recent archaeological investigations suggested that these artefacts are around 300,000 years old. Similar artefacts have been found in the gravel pits around Chard Junction.

References

References

  1. "Explorer 116 - Lyme Regis & Bridport". [[Ordnance Survey]].
  2. "Explorer 117 - Cerne Abbas & Bere Regis". [[Ordnance Survey]].
  3. "Parish Biodiversity Audit for Axmouth". Devon County Council.
  4. ["River Axe SSSI citation"]({{sssi link). [[Natural England]].
  5. (15 August 2016). "Three Historic Shipwrecks Given Protection".
  6. (15 August 2016). "Three of England's oldest shipwrecks can still be seen on sand and mud in Devon".
  7. "Nature Reserves in the area". Axe Vale & District Conservation Society.
  8. "Visiting Seaton Wetlands". East Devon District Council.
  9. Moir, J.R.. (1936). "Ancient man in Devon". Proceedings of the Devon Archaeological Exploration Society.
  10. Hosfield, R.T.. (2013). "Quaternary History and Palaeolithic Archaeology in the Axe Valley at Broom, South West England". Oxbow Books.
  11. Basell, Laura. (2011). "The Quaternary of the Exe Valley and Adjoining Areas". Quaternary Research Association.
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