Harman Patil (Editor)

Aqualate Mere

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Location
  
Staffordshire, England

Basin countries
  
United Kingdom

Cities
  
Newport

Type
  
mere

Settlements
  
Newport, Shropshire

Aqualate Mere wwwfriendsofmotteymeadowsorgukwpcontentuploa

Similar
  
Belvide Reservoir, Doxey Marshes, St Nicholas Church - Newport, Rostherne Mere, Lilleshall Abbey

Aqualate mere virtual tour


Aqualate Mere is the largest natural lake in the English Midlands and is managed as a National Nature Reserve (NNR) by Natural England. It is a remnant of the prehistoric Lake Lapworth.

Contents

Map of Aqualate Mere, Newport, UK

The Mere lies within the borough of Stafford in Staffordshire, England, some 3 km east of the market town of Newport, Shropshire. It is within the grounds of Aqualate Hall, a country house, with a landscaped deer park.

Although large in extent (1.5 km long and 0.5 km wide), the Mere is remarkably shallow and is nowhere much more than one metre deep. Aqualate Mere is an example of an esker system (rare in the Midlands) formed by glacial meltwaters during the late Devensian glaciation, about 50,000 years ago. The depression in which the Mere lies, thought to be a kettle hole, and the surrounding higher ground which comprises glacial sand and gravel deposits were all formed at the same time.

It is fed by streams coming from the north, south and east (including Back Brook), and its outflow to the west forms the River Meese which joins the River Tern, a tributary of the River Severn.

The Mere supports diverse fish and bird populations, including large numbers of wintering and breeding wildfowl and breeding Eurasian curlew and common snipe. Together with the surrounding land, it is also important for its botanical and invertebrate communities. Mammals found on the NNR include polecat, water vole and harvest mouse, together with bats such as pipistrelle, Daubenton's, Natterer's, Brandt's and whiskered.

Its name came from Anglo-Saxon Āc-gelād = "oak grove".

Aqualate mere wildlife


References

Aqualate Mere Wikipedia