The Secrets of the Groby Pool Mud
Online (free)
Join Charnwood Forest Geopark for a special online public talk by Professors Helen Bennion and Carl Sayer of University College London. They will introduce you to the wonderful world of palaeoecology, and the dynamic series of changes in the Groby Pool ecosystem their research has revealed… from looking at the mud!
Groby Pool is a small (12 ha), shallow (<1.1 m mean depth) medieval artificial lake in the East Midlands of England. As one of only a few standing waterbodies in Leicestershire and with its once diverse aquatic plant communities, it has attracted naturalists since the mid-eighteenth century and has one of the best recorded botanical histories in the region. These records reveal a clear shift towards plant species characteristic of nutrient-rich conditions and suggest that the lake has experienced eutrophication over the last few hundred years. Against this backdrop, we have conducted a series of palaeoecological studies, involving analysis of biological remains of plants and animals preserved in lake sediment cores, to further elucidate the history of the lake and to better understand the timing, causes and nature of ecological change. In our talk we will introduce you to the wonderful world of palaeoecology and the dynamic series of changes in the Groby Pool ecosystem revealed by the mud.
This event is provided by Charnwood Forest Geopark, and supported by the National Lottery Heritage Fund. The talk will be online, and you can watch it via any of the options below:
- YouTube: https://youtube.com/live/7W7vrEWeqBQ
- Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/376810771740022/
- X/Twitter: https://twitter.com/CharnwoodGeo (the livestream post will appear in our feed once it begins)
Please note, if you wish to be able to ask a question to the speakers, you will need an account with the platform you have chosen to watch the talk on. Questions can be asked by writing a comment on the livesteam. The event is free, and no booking is required.