Spatial boundaries The generally accepted boundaries are the
Late Cretaceous Chalk Group's
escarpments of the
Chilterns and
Marlborough Downs to the north and the
North Downs and Berkshire Downs to the south. To the south lie the
Weald and
Salisbury Plain and to the north is the
Vale of Aylesbury. The approximate western limit is in the
Marlborough area of
Wiltshire. The eastern end merges with the
North Sea Basin, extending on land along the north
Kent coast to
Reculver and up the east coast of
Essex and into
Suffolk, where it is overlain by
Pleistocene 'Crag' deposits which cover much of eastern
Suffolk and
Norfolk and are better considered as part of the North Sea Basin. The axis of the basin runs west–east from Marlborough and
Newbury (Berkshire) to
Chertsey (Surrey) before swinging slightly north of east through
Westminster, passing midway between
Chelmsford and
Southend-on-Sea (Essex) to the east coast between the estuaries of the
Crouch and the
Blackwater. Though north of the current mouth of the Thames, this line is well to the south of the centre-line of the basin which is asymmetric, its southern limb dipping more steeply than the northern. of southeast England and the region around the
English Channel, showing the London Basin in its regional context.
Geological boundaries The Basin formed on top of the Late Cretaceous
Chalk Group, which is exposed on the
dip slopes of the Chilterns and North Downs. Within the centre of the basin the Chalk is mainly covered by
Palaeocene,
Eocene and younger rocks, though the chalk is also brought to the surface by localised
folds and
faults, for example at
Windsor Castle,
Lewisham and
Purfleet. The Chalk forms an
artesian basin, with fresh water springs emerging on the bed of the
Thames. In the greater part of the basin the surface rock is Eocene
London Clay, flanked at the margins by older deposits such as the
Reading Beds. In large areas towards the western end the London Clay is overlain by rather younger deposits of the
Bagshot Beds etc., forming sandy heaths. ==Tectonic history==