Tuckmill Nature Reserve by jon_lip

Tuckmill Nature Reserve

This was taken last week when I went to see what Tuckmill Nature Reserve was like (about 3 miles from home) and if there was anything there that warranted a photo. I came across this stream and bridge.
A little bit of it's history is here:
Tuckmill - also known as Tuckmill Meadows - is an wonderfully diverse 15 acre nature reserve on the outskirts of Shrivenham. It is a Site of Special Scientific Interest (SSSI) for both its calcareous (limestone) fen and its species-rich neutral and calcareous grassland. Tuckmill Stream forms its north-east boundary while, to the west, there are the aspen, ash and sycamore trees of Ratcoombe Copse. Shrivenham Park Golf Club is another neighbour as well as Cross Trees Park, the land of which provides the catchment area for Ratcoombe Brook. This brook forms the spine of the whole reserve, flowing into the larger Tuckmill Stream and carrying with it limestone from the reserve’s Coral Rag rock base. There are many springs along the boundary - both sides of the Ratcoombe Brook and the Tuckmill Stream where the limestone merges into the clay-like material.

​Tuckmill Stream, from which the nature reserve gets its name, originally meandered across the site. However this was straightened during the 12th century for use in a mill which was part of Tuckmill Farm and sited on the brook's Watchfield bank. The residual meanders of the stream today form the fenland that is a significant part of the reserve.
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