Ebbor Gorge is a limestone Canyon in Somerset, England, designated and notified in 1952 as a biological Site of Special Scientific Interest in the Mendip Hills. It was donated to the National Trust in 1967 and is now managed by Natural England as a national nature reserve.
The gorge was cut mostly into the Clifton Down Limestone, part of the Lower Carboniferous Pembroke Group, by water. The site was occupied by humans in the Neolithic Era and their tools and flint arrow heads have been discovered, along with pottery from the Bronze Age. There are also fossils of small mammals from the Late Devensian. The nature reserve provides a habitat for a variety of flora and fauna, including flowers, butterflies and bats.
A stream issuing to the west of the site runs down the tributary valley of Hope Wood before joining the main gorge. The original watercourse which may have cut the gorge into the limestone became diverted underground and now emerges at Wookey Hole Caves to form the River Axe.
Several caves occur within the Gorge, of which Bridged Pot and Gully Cave provide some of the best Late Devensian small-mammal assemblages known from Britain. Most of the deposits remain in situ and include Pika, Arctic lemming, Norway lemming, various , red deer and reindeer. Bronze Age finds include pottery from the Beaker culture, a stone axe and flint knife.
The site is close to Wookey Hole and caves and offers views across the Somerset Levels to Glastonbury Tor and beyond. There are three marked trails of varying lengths around the steeply wooded gorge, the longest being long, the shortest of which is suitable for wheelchair users.
The varied age and canopy structure of woodland encourages a high diversity of Butterfly, nationally scarce species including the white-letter hairstreak ( Strymonidia walbum) and high brown fritillary ( Fabriciana adippe), while species such as the chalkhill blue ( Lysandra coridon) and brown argus ( Aricia agestis) occur on the limestone grassland. Greater horseshoe bats ( Rhinolophus ferrumequinum) and lesser horseshoes ( Rhinolophus hipposideros) regularly use sites in the Gorge as hibernacular roosts. The site also supports birds of prey and a few red deer.
Biology and ecology
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