A
downland is an area of open
chalk hills.
This term is
especially used to describe the chalk
countryside in southern England
.
Areas of downland are often referred to as
Downs.
The word
'down' derives from a medieval germanic
or norse word — "dun", a
hill.
Formation of downland
Downland is formed when
chalk
formation are raised above the surrounding rocks. The chalk
slowly
erodes to form characteristic rolling
hills and valleys. As the
Cretaceous
chalk layer in southern England is typically tilted, chalk downland
formations often have a marked
scarp
slope on one side, which is very steep, and a
dip slope on the other, which is much shallower.
Where the
downs meet the sea, characteristic white chalk cliffs form, such as the White cliffs of
Dover
and Beachy
Head
.
Hydrology
Chalk deposits are very
porous, so the height
of the
water table in chalk hills rises
in winter and falls in summer. This leads to characteristic chalk
downland features such as dry valleys or
coombes, and seasonally-flowing streams or
winterbournes. The modern practice of
extracting water from this 'reservoir', in order to satisfy demand
for water, may be putting some of these streams under extreme
stress.
In the valleys below the downs there is typically a
clay soil, and at the interface between the two a
springline can occur where water emerges from the porous chalk.
Along this line, settlements and farms were often built, as on the
higher land no water was available.
This is demonstrated very clearly beneath
the scarp of the White Horse Hills, above the Vale of White
Horse
. In many chalk downland areas there is no
surface water at all other than artificially created
dewponds.
Downland soil
The
soil profile of chalk downland in
England
is a thin soil overlaying the parent chalk.
Weathering of the chalk has created a characteristic soil known as
rendzina. Unlike many soils in which there
are easily distinguished layers or
soil
horizons, a chalk rendzina soil consists of only a shallow dark
humus rich surface layer which grades through
a lighter brown hillwash containing small pellets of chalk, to the
white of the chalk itself. This is largely because of the purity of
the chalk which is here about 98%
calcium carbonate and the consequent
absence of soil-building
clay minerals which
are abundant, for example, in valley floors.
Steep slopes on chalk downland develop a ribbed pattern of grass
covered horizontal steps a foot or two high. Although subsequently
emphasised by cattle and sheep walking along them, these
terracettes (commonly known as sheep tracks)
were formed by the movement of soil downhill, a process known as
soil creep.
Downland habitat
temperate regions chalk downland is typically
calcareous grassland, a
habitat formed by grazing from both
livestock and wild animals. Chalk downland
is often unsuitable for intensive
agriculture,
horticulture or development, because of the
nutrient-poor, shallow soil and difficult slopes. For this reason
downland often survived uncultivated when other, more easily worked
land was ploughed or reseeded. However, equally this shallow soil
structure makes downland ecosystems extremely fragile and easy to
destroy. With modern machinery and fertilizing techniques it has
become possible to use some previously uncultivated downland for
arable farming, and the decline of extensive grazing has meant that
many areas of downland, whilst not cultivated, when ungrazed revert
to
scrub or other less rare habitat,
essentially destroying the delicate calcareous grassland. The UK
cover of lowland
calcareous
grassland has suffered a sharp decline in extent since the
middle of the 20th century.
There are no comprehensive figures, but a
sample of chalk sites in England
surveyed in
1966 and 1980 showed a 20% loss in that period and an assessment of
chalk grassland in Dorset
found that
over 50% had been lost between the mid-1950s and the early
1990s. Much remaining chalk downland has been protected
against future development, due to its unique
biodiversity.
Examples of downland
- Berkshire Downs
and White Horse Hills
- Chiltern Hills
(Dunstable
Downs
)
- Cranborne Chase

- Dorset Downs
(Hambledon
Hill
, Hodd
Hill
, Maiden Castle
, Cerne Abbas Giant
)
- Isle of Wight
(The
Needles
, Tennyson
Down
, St
Boniface Down
, Culver
Down
)
- North Downs
(White Cliffs of Dover
, Langdon Bay
, Box Hill
, Hog's
Back
)
- Purbeck Hills
(Ballard
Down
, Lulworth
Cove
, Old Harry
Rocks
, White
Nothe
)
- Salisbury Plain

- South Downs
(Beachy
Head
, Seven Sisters
, Ditchling
Beacon
, Butser
Hill
)
External links
References