Whitbread, K., Ellen, R., Callaghan, E., Gordon, J. E. and Arkley, S. 2015. East Lothian Geodiversity Audit. British Geological Survey Open Report, OR/14/063. 192pp.
ELC_29: Gullane Bents
Site information
Location and summary description:
Gullane Bents is a 2km long stretch of sand dunes and beach located to the west of the town. It is of geomorphological interest as an applied case study of sand dune restoration following extensive disturbance.
National Grid reference:
Mid-point:
West-end:
East-end:
Site type: Natural landform
Site ownership: Crown, East Lothian Council
Current use: Open country; recreational land.
Field surveyors: John Gordon
Current geological designations: Firth of Forth SSSI
Date visited: 5 November 2014
Other designations: Firth of Forth SPA, Ramsar
Site map
Site description
Background
The site comprises an area of sand dunes and beach on the north-west side of Gullane. The dunes overlie a raised beach with a backing cliff inland
Quaternary deposits and landforms
A detailed description of the geomorphology of Gullane Bents is provided by Rose (1980). The central part of the bay is fronted by a single low foredune ridge with a duneslack behind, then an area of climbing dunes on the backing cliff. A zone of more complex high dunes occurs to the north-east
Sand dunes probably began to form along the East Lothian coast after the retreat of the last ice sheet in places where there was an abundance of sand derived from glacifluvial sediments. This material has been reworked by wind and sea during the Holocene. As relative sea level rose during the early part of the Holocene, large quantities of sand moved shorewards. The sand was blown inland, forming climbing dunes on the rising topography. As relative sea level subsequently fell, the sand dune system extended seawards.
The Babtie Group ABP Research & Consultancy Ltd. (2002) report summarises the main changes over the last few centuries. Net erosion has generally exceeded accretion over the last hundred years as a result of human impacts and natural processes, accompanied by steepening of the beach.
Predominant wave directions from northeast and east result in westerly sand movement, reflected in accretion at the west end of the bay. Between 1907 and 1999, the Babtie Group ABP Research & Consultancy Ltd. (2002) estimated maximum coastal recession of 40 m from comparison of OS maps.
Along much of the length of the bay, apart from the western end, the coastal edge of the foredune ridge is currently undercut by the sea, particularly in winter, with collapse of sea buckthorn plants down the seaward face, a similar situation to that noted by Rose in 1980
The dunes formed under conditions of abundant sediment supply, conditions that no longer exist. Contemporary dune formation and maintenance are therefore limited by low sand supply. A likely future scenario under rising sea levels and increasing magnitude and/or frequency of storm events involves erosion and onshore migration of the coastal edge, washovers and possibly breaching of the foredune barrier and dune blowouts (Babtie, 2002).
Assessment of site: access and safety
Road access and parking Access is along a minor road (Sandy Loan) in Gullane off the A198 coastal road east from Edinburgh. There is a public car park and toilets.
Safety of access No additional precautions beyond those normally associated with visiting a beach and dunes.
Safety of exposure No special precautions are required.
Access There is good access on footpaths from the public car park at Gullane Bents.
Current condition The condition is good.
Current conflicting activities None known.
Restricting conditions The cover of sea buckthorn restricts views of the inland dunes.
Nature of exposure Beach, coastal.
Assessment of site: culture, heritage & economic value
Historic, archaeological & literary associations WWII – military exercises were undertaken in the area.
Aesthetic landscape Coastal landscape
History of earth sciences No known association
Economic geology Sand extraction prior to WWII.
Assessment of site: geoscientific merit
Rarity | Quality | Literature/collections | Primary interest | |
Lithostratigraphy | ||||
Sedimentology | ||||
Igneous/mineral/metamorphic geology | ||||
Structural geology | ||||
Palaeontology | ||||
Geomorphology | Regional | Good/Excellent | Rose, 1980; Babtie Group ABP Research & Consultancy Ltd., | X |
Site geoscientific value
Gullane Bents has been the subject of a major sand dune restoration programme. There is significant potential for education and public interpretation on coastal dynamics associated with human impacts and natural processes, particularly in a context of climate change. The large amount of documentary evidence makes it a particularly good case study of coastal changes under natural processes and human impacts.
Gullane Bents is a good example of sand dune restoration, with regional significance.
Assessment of site: current site usage
Community The beach and dunes are heavily used for recreation.
Education There is significant potential for education and public interpretation on coastal dynamics associated with human impacts and natural processes.
Assessment of site: fragility and potential use of the site
Fragility The site is vulnerable to heavy trampling, off-road vehicle use, tree planting, hard engineering responses to coastal erosion, waste tipping and potential development.
Potential use School education and public interpretation addressing coastal dynamics and living with a dynamic landscape in the context of climate change and sea-level rise.
Geodiversity summary
The site is a good case study of sand dune restoration and there is potential for developing its educational value and public interpretation through promoting existing available information and historical material held by East Lothian Council.