
Chalk and sandstone cliffs, Norfolk

Image below: tiny shells of chalk plankton seen with an electron microscope

These layers of rock show a rise in global sea-level that occurred about 100 million years ago. The shallow-water, in which iron-rich sands were deposited was followed by deeper clear warm seas in which tiny marine organisms (plankton) lived. These died and fell to the bottom as fine white mud that eventually became the fine limestone that we call Chalk.
The cliffs and boulders contain fossil remains of the creatures that lived in these seas, including shells, sea-urchins and ammonites, as well as preserved burrows of creatures that lived in the sea-floor sediment.
Hunstanton cliffs, Norfolk

