United Kingdom
Dorset and East Devon Coast
Dorset and East Devon Coast is an area that has been globally important for the study of paleontology, geology and geomorphology for over 300 years.
Here, along the coast, rock formations are exposed from the Triassic, Jurassic and Cretaceous eras. At the rocks, great numbers of animal (marine and terrestrial) and plant fossils have been discovered. Geomorphological fields of study include a great variety of landslides and beach formation and evolution on a retreating coastline.
Community Perspective: the local tourism board promotes this as the Jurassic Coast, and the whole WHS can be walked along the South West Coast path. Areas of interest include Lulworth Cove and the Durdle Door, fossil hunting on the shore at Lyme Regis (Joel), Chesil Beach (John, Jay), Westbay (Jakob), Old Harry Rock (Caspar). You can admire the coast from a boat as well, as did James.
Site Info
Official Information
- Full Name
- Dorset and East Devon Coast (ID: 1029)
- Country
- United Kingdom
- Status
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Inscribed 2001
Site history
History of Dorset and East Devon Coast
- WHS Type
- Natural
- Criteria
- viii
Links
- UNESCO
- whc.unesco.org
All Links
UNESCO.org
- whc.unesco.org — whc.unesco.org/
Related Resources
- jurassiccoast.org — Jurassic Coast
News Article
- Feb. 9, 2025 bbc.com — Jurassic Coast charity to shut down
- Feb. 15, 2024 advisor.museumsandheritage.com — New museum and visitor centre planned for Jurassic Coast World Heritage site
- Dec. 11, 2023 bbc.com — Huge sea monster emerges from Dorset cliffs
- July 9, 2023 heritagedaily.com — World's oldest 'stomach stone' fossil found on Jurassic Coast
- Feb. 1, 2023 theguardian.com — ‘Charmouth crocodile’ found by fossil hunters identified as new genus of croc-like creature
- June 3, 2020 bbc.com — Jurassic Coast beach crowds 'showed shocking disregard for area'
- Sept. 5, 2015 telegraph.co.uk — Navitus Bay wind farm off Jurassic Coast set to be rejected
- March 5, 2015 designntrend.com — Plans In The Works For An Actual Dinosaur Park 'Jurassic Cove'
- May 28, 2014 dailymail.co.uk — Wind farm could compromise WH Status of Jurassic Coast
- Dec. 23, 2013 theguardian.com — Plans for £ 85m Jurassic coast theme park
- July 19, 2013 thisisexeter.co.uk — Café plan rejected at Jurassic Coast
- Jan. 14, 2013 guardian.co.uk — Residents express alarm over plans to widen restaurant and renovate beach along Lulworth Cove
- July 25, 2012 bbc.co.uk — Dorset cliff landslide
- Oct. 20, 2011 dailymail.co.uk — Planners who wrongly allowed a millionaire to build an enormous beach hut on Britain's World Heritage Coast have been officially rebuked.
- Oct. 28, 2009 nydailynews.com — New fossil found in Jurassic Coast makes pliosaur biggest predator among the dinosaurs
- March 14, 2009 telegraph.co.uk — Dinosaur footprint dating back 135 million years stolen from Jurassic Coast
- March 3, 2009 bournemouthecho.co.uk — The Jurassic Coast has exceeded expectations in the benefits that it has brought to the region since becoming a World Heritage Site
- May 8, 2008 independent.co.uk — Huge landslide hits Dorset's Jurassic Coast
- Feb. 26, 2008 news.bbc.co.uk — Clavell Tower saved from sea plunge.
- Nov. 28, 2007 24hourmuseum.org.uk — 130 million year old crocodile skull found on Dorset Jurassic Coast
- Jan. 22, 2007 timesonline.co.uk — Pollution could wreak havoc on World Heritage coast
Community Information
- Community Category
- Paleontology: Non-hominid fossils
Travel Information
Recent Connections
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Bioluminescence
The Pholas dactylus, or common piddok, … -
IUGS Geological Heritage Sites
Jurassic Coast: Lyme RegisSee iugs-ge…
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Stone Quarries
Beer Quarry Caves. Used since Roman tim…
Connections of Dorset and East Devon Coast
- Individual People
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Napoleon was here
There is a story that Napoleon was seen landing in 1804 at Lulworth (to inspect it as an invasion beachhead), Thomas Hardy later writing a poem and a short story about these incidents. -
Painted by JMW Turner
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- Geography
- Trivia
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Tourist Treks
South West Coast Path -
Nudist beaches
Weston BeachSee nuff.org.uk
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Fatal Accidents or 'disasters'
Durdle Door - Repeated visitor deaths from "Tombstoning" - "A total of at least 20 people have died after tombstoning since 2005."See www.dorset.live
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On Passports
For anti counterfeiting reasons UK Passports contain pages overprinted with pictures of the Dorset Coast (Durdle Door) (Pages 17 + 43)
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- Ecology
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Bioluminescence
The Pholas dactylus, or common piddok, glows when you eat it. -
Tombolos
Chesil Beach -
Natural Arches and Bridges
Durdle door -
Dinosaur Remains
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Lagoons
The body of water behind Chesil Beach is called "The Fleet Lagoon"See www.soton.ac.uk
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Dunes
Orcombe Point - Ancient stratified sand dunes -
Coral
Sunset star coral (found at Saw-tooth Ledges) -
Sea Stacks
Old Harry Rocks -
Tidal effects
a tidal lagoon known as The Fleet, one of the most important saline lagoons in Europe (Coastal WHS) -
Fossils
The property includes a range of globally significant fossil localities - both vertebrate and invertebrate, marine and terrestrial - which have produced well preserved and diverse evidence of life during Mesozoic times. (crit viii)
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- World Heritage Process
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Inscribed on a single criterion only
viii. to be outstanding examples representing major stages of earth's history, including the record of life, significant on-going geological processes in the development of landforms, or significant geomorphic or physiographic features
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- Human Activity
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Stone Quarries
Beer Quarry Caves. Used since Roman times and the source of strong but easily carved stone for many of England's most famous buildings such as the Tower of London, Westminster Abbey and Windsor Castle.See en.wikipedia.org
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- Constructions
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Lighthouses
Portland Bill lighthouse: 20C construction, near two 18C ones that are not in use anymoreSee en.wikipedia.org
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- WHS on Other Lists
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European Diploma of Protected Areas
That part east of Weymouth as "Purbeck Heritage Coast" -
Ramsar Wetlands
Chesil Beach & The Fleet -
Natura 2000
Isle of Portland to Studland Cliffs -
IUGS Geological Heritage Sites
Jurassic Coast: Lyme Regis
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- Timeline
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Jurassic
The property's geology displays approximately 185 million years of the Earth's history, including a number of internationally important fossil localities. (Nom file)
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- Visiting conditions
- 18
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Marvel Cinematic Universe
Briefly in Spider-Man Far From Home
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News
- bbc.com 02/09/2025
- Jurassic Coast charity to shut down
- advisor.museumsandheritage.com 02/15/2024
- New museum and visitor centre plan…
- bbc.com 12/11/2023
- Huge sea monster emerges from Dors…
Recent Visitors
Reserved for members.Community Reviews
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This was almost certainly the first World Heritage Site I ever visited, on a family holiday to Devon aged two. Therefore, I have always ticked it off on my list despite having no memory of it and so, decades later, sought to rectify that. This is the only natural site in Britain as things stand, although Scotland’s Flow Country looks set to be nominated in the coming years and the UK has other natural sites at Giant’s Causeway in Ireland and many others spread across its overseas territories. It technically consists of eight separate sites although they are all contiguous across a core zone that stretches 155 kilometres from Orcombe Rocks in the west to Old Harry Rocks in the east although there are gaps for the towns of Sidmouth, Seaton, Lyme Regis, West Bay, Weymouth, and Swanage. In terms of public transport, trains can be taken to Exmouth and Weymouth with a heritage service also running to Swanage, from all of which it is a short walk into the inscribed areas. The more famous sites like Durdle Door and Lulworth Cove are more rural so you will have to rely on a likely irregular bus service or find your own transportation.
With this being a coastal site, I thought that a boat trip would be the best way to see the site. However, it was not until afterwards I realised that the official maps seem to show the core zone is entirely on land so, if you feel …
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I would love to say it was highbrow literature that made me excited to visit England's Dorset and East Devon Coast in May of 2018, but On Chesil Beach just wasn't that inspiring to me. Instead, it was the BBC's excellent television production of Broadchurch that brought me to West Bay, Dorset, next to the iconic cliffs of the Jurassic Coast which formed the backdrop for the murder mystery. After visiting the scene of the crime (as well as the fictional Wessex police department), I hiked up and down the beach admiring the towering sandstone bluff while listening to the waves crashing in, before ascending the hill and hiking east along the clifftops. It is easy to see why this has been labeled an "Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty" in the UK. Back in West Bay, signs near the harbor explained the history and geology of the Jurassic Coast (also mentioning its World Heritage Site status). So as not to ignore other sections of the coast, the next day I made sure to stop by Chesil Beach, where I spent a morning trudging through the pebbles that form the shingle beach. I much preferred the Jurassic Coast by West Bay.
Logistics: To visit both West Bay and Chesil Beach, it is easiest to use private transporation; trails along the coast provide hiking opportunities as well.
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I only got the opportunity to explore the western end of this 95 mile long UNESCO World heritage coastline, but it’s enough to get a taste of the cliffs and beaches that hold stones and fossils from the Triassic, Cretaceous and Jurassic periods. Though it’s known as the Dorset and East Devon Coastline, the tourism board promote it as the Jurassic Coast, I guess thanks to Steven Spielberg and Universal.
I was with my bike so cycled from the train station at Wool to the Durdle Door. Its picture features amongst every postcard collage along this coastline, and is a magnet for every visitor to this part of the world for its spectacular setting and for the ample opportunity it provides to amateur photographers, and by that I mean selfie-takers. It’s only a five mile ride from Wool, skirting through the lovely village of West Lulworth and past the estate of the same name which hosts the annual Bestival music festival.
From the car park it’s a steep downward shuffle to the viewpoint and access to the beach. Like goats descending down a dusty mountainside, the other tourists and I made our ways gingerly down to two large green rubbish bins on the edge of a cliff. A slight anti-climax perhaps until you step past the giant receptacles and realise the view that welcomes you. At the left hand end of a small, sweeping bay, a pointy green hill whips its tail out into the perfectly clear waters …

I visited this WHS in May 2019. After a long drive from London and due to the cloudy weather upon arrival, I opted to head straight to my cottage/inn just after Wareham and only a short stroll from Lulworth Cove.
I really enjoyed walking for hours on end from one cove/beach/viewpoint to the next along the Coast Path, gazing in awe at the geological marvel and natural beauty of the Devon 'Jurassic' Coast WHS. Just a few steps away to the right (away from the cove) from the pay and display Lulworth Cove Parking Lot, a small trail will lead you to a panoramic viewpoint of Stair Hole which is sculpted from three rock types and further on to a magnificent viewpoint of Lulworth Cove.
Here not only will you find the UNESCO inscription plaque but it is one of the best spots to view from right to left, rocks from 150 to 65 million years ago - namely Portland stone, Purbeck beds, wealden beds, greensand and chalk, from oldest to youngest. The rocks were formed underwater and were later tilted as the continents collided. In fact some 10,000 years ago, the sea flooded in the huge river of glacial meltwater which was Lulworth Cove, removing the softer rocks behind the wall of Portland stone. The tilted layers of rock visible at Lulworth Cove, Stair Hole and elsewhere along the inscribed Devon Coast are the result of what is technically known as folding. In my opinion this is …
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I was quite taken by the Dorset Coast. We spent there two days and could have easily spent more. Our first walk was to Old Harry Rock. Beautiful white cliffs (chalk is the youngest layer of the Jurassic coast's time line), not as high as Dover but purer white. We parked the car in Studland, walk east along the north shore of the peninsula and returned over the ridge. It is not clearly indicated and your have to enter a fenced meadow but you have a nice view in both bays and can easily descend over the fields downhill when you are on the hight of Studland.
Our next stop was the famous Lulworth cave. There are two possible walks from there to Durdle Door. One over the hills which is a bit steep but easy and one along the beach which is officially closed due to land slide. It is doable nonetheless though not well marked: You can walk up Britwell Drive, descend from there to the shore. You walk a while along a stony beach (good shoes) and then comes a short section where you have to walk partly on the rocks and partly in the water, a bit adventurous but fun. Don't do it if you are not secure on your feet or with small children. After that comes the landslide part which is really easy when it is dry but possibly difficult after rain. From there we took the hill path back.
Lime Regis …
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March 2018 - After our visit in Stonehenge and Salisbury (on 5th of March!) we finally wanted to cut the coast somewhere.
We went to Westbay and had a long walk along the cliffs. Unfortunately this was our only real encounter with the world heritage coast, but it was quite amazing. You could see the Isle of Portland and to the other side up to Torquay. Many seagulls were nesting in the cliffs and even more people walked their dogs along the coastline. The weather was perfect that day, so the view was magnificent and the whole experience well done!
We made another stop at Seaton, but not as intersting as the coastline in Westbay.
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We visited the Jurassic Coast of Dorset and East Devon in May 2016. The site itself is very large, and covers about 1/3rd of the southern coastline of England. Although we'd allowed for two days to drive various parts of it, very uncooperative weather meant that we had to rush through most of it in just one day. The highlights I'd recommend are:
- Lulworth Cove, where you can see several hundred million years of geology in one spot
- Durdle Door, just adjacent to Lulworth Cove and very spectacular
- Fossil hunting on the shore at Lyme Regis, where many dinosaur bones have been found and ammonite fossils are just sitting around on rocks
- The Dorset County Museum in Weymouth has quite a bit of info as well and is a good rainy day options
Several other spots including the rock stacks near Durdle Door we had to skip, partly for time but also because many places charge 5 pounds or more for parking!
See below for my full video review.
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Walking along the beautiful coastline of white chalk cliff between the Lulworth Cove and the natural arch of Durdle Door was probably one of the highlights of my England trip. Originally not part of my first plan, but I decided to visit this place after saw picture of the Durdle Door on Wikipedia, at that time I hardly believed that the place was in England.
Travel without own vehicle was the real pain in the area especially in winter, from Wool train station there were infrequent bus connect the town to the village of West Lulworth, but the schedule was not so friendly to leisurely sightseer, at the end I decided to take taxi to Durdle Door and walk back to Lulworth Cove for better bus connection. Taxi took me to some kind of campsite with many small summer houses in the middle of green rolling hills, the driver said this place was the most convenient to see the famous natural arch, and true to his words, after walking downhill I started to see the coastline with stunning turquoise water of Atlantic. Then I saw the headland and a cove, the one on the photo of Ian Cade’s review, called Men O’ War Cove, the view was pretty lovely, I continued along the pathway to see the viewpoint where with my surprised, I saw the Durdle Door! Actually, I planned to walk on the beach in Durdle Cove, but the access was closed with warning sign of danger, so …
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I also found extensive views of Chesil Beach from the causeway near Weymouth and from Littlesea.
The quarry area on Portland bill was very interesting too, with the cut stones ready to be lowered into barges, long since discontinued, for tranport and use in many London buildings.
Other interesting features along the cast were the cliffs at Bowleaze Cove, the red cliffs of Sidmouth and the Devon Cliffs at Exmouth.
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I really quite enjoyed my trips to this piece of coastline, I have visited pretty regularly having family days out here when I was very young, but I have also made two trips to specifically tick it off as a visited site.
Whilst the reasons for its inscription may seem a little dull,
“The coastal exposures within the site provide an almost continuous sequence of Triassic, Jurassic and Cretaceous rock formations spanning the Mesozoic Era”
The reality is actually a little more interesting and you don’t have to be a budding geologist to have a nice trip here.
I visited the part of the coast stretching from the almost completely circular Lulworth Cove along to the Durdle Door (which is just the other side of the headland in the picture). It is a really nice walk, giving you a bit of exercise and fresh air as well as the ‘Highlights’ of the coast, well for the non expert anyway. Unfortunately after a few hours spent breaking open any rock we could see we were not able to uncover any fossils, but apparently this is one of the best places in the Europe to do it.
The little village of Lulworth has a great visitor centre and a fine fish and chip shop so makes a nice place to start and end in. And for those that share my silly obsession of finding the World Heritage symbol on a plaque then just to the west of the cove there is a …
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The views of Durdle Door and Portland Bay from the cliff tops are quite something and the walk down to the beaches at Durdle Door is certainly worth the effort. On a hot day the sea is so inviting and clean and on a stormy day, the atmosphere is simply electric.
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I'm delighted to see that you have listed the spectacular Dorset and East Devon coastline so quickly and that you have visited this beautiful part of the world. More information on this coast can be found on www.jurassiccoast.com and information on the area can be found on www.westdorset.com The swannary is in the beautiful village of Abbotsbury on the Dorset coast. The famous Chesil beach, a major feature of this World Heritage Site, is best viewed from the hill above Abbotsbury village.
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This is the closest site to me but it has taken me a long tme to get around to see it. In the end i was very happy that i did. I visited the area around Lulworth Cove and the Durdle Door, which was a really fantastic way to spend an afternoon and the walk along the cliff top is highly advisable, it is a nice 2km (1.2 mile) walk, but it is up and down hill so provides a bit of a work out!!. the two Lulworth Villages were really pretty aswell. definatly worth a visit if you are in the area, amkes a nice afternoon away from nearby Bournmouth, which is a very nice places to visit aswell
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