Kimmeridge village is sited beside a small stream on a roughly southwest-facing slope between the English Channel coast less than to the southwest and a curving line of hills immediately to the north and east. Measured directly it is about west of
Swanage, south of
Wareham and east of
Weymouth. Kimmeridge civil parish covers land south and east of Kimmeridge village; it is bounded by the village stream and the
copses of Higher and Lower Stonehips to the northwest, Smedmore Hill and the summit of
Swyre Head to the northeast, field boundaries beyond Swalland Farm to the southeast, and the coastline between Rope Lake Head and Gaulter Gap to the southwest. The neighbouring parishes are
Corfe Castle to the southeast,
Church Knowle to the east, and
Steeple to the north; this last parish includes the western half of Kimmeridge Bay and land very close to Kimmeridge village. The coast at Kimmeridge also forms part of the South Dorset Coast
Site of Special Scientific Interest. All of Kimmeridge parish is within the
Dorset National Landscape (formerly "Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty"), which is a national designation that signifies the highest level of protection in relation to landscape scenic beauty. All the buildings in Kimmeridge village are within the Kimmeridge
Conservation Area, which was created by the local planning authority in 1975 because of the historic and architectural interest of the village. Over of the coast and underwater environment at Kimmeridge Bay are designated as the Purbeck Marine Wildlife Reserve, the UK's oldest Voluntary Marine Nature Reserve; although offering no legal wildlife protection, there is a visitor centre beside Kimmeridge Bay. . Kimmeridge parish occupies the further half of the bay and most of the land beyond it. Kimmeridge village is out of shot to the left.
Geology The geology of Kimmeridge civil parish comprises
bedrock formed in the
Late Jurassic epoch, overlain in many places by superficial
Quaternary head deposits. The bedrock is mostly
Kimmeridge clay, except for the top of Smedmore Hill and along to Swyre Head, which is formed from
Portland stone. Between this and the Kimmeridge clay, and outcropping just beneath the top of the hill, is a thin band of
Portland sand. Landslip deposits from the Portland stone cover most of the steep southwest-facing slopes of the hills. Within the Kimmeridge clay are bands of bituminous shale and
dolomite, which form flat ledges within Kimmeridge Bay that are exposed at low tide. Kimmeridge gives its name to the
Kimmeridgian, the division of the Jurassic period in which the beds were laid down, because of the quality of the cliffs and the
fossils they yield. Kimmeridge is also the
type locality for the Jurassic age Kimmeridge Clay formation, which is well represented in southern England, and provides one of the
source rocks for hydrocarbons found in the Wessex and North Sea Basins. The
Kimmeridge Oil Field is northwest of Kimmeridge Bay. On the cliff west of the village is the
Perenco "nodding donkey" oil pump which has been pumping continually since the late 1950s, making it the oldest working oil pump in the UK. The well currently yields around from the
Middle Jurassic strata that lie around below the cliff. The well has been operating for this long because it has tapped into a network of connected reserves; however the yield is decreasing year on year. The oil is transported by tanker to the Perenco site at
Wytch Farm from whence it is piped to the main refinery on Southampton Water. ==Demography==