Programme of Events
The Black Country Geological Society’s indoor meetings are now held at The Lamp Tavern. The room is on the top floor and there is a lift. The address of The Lamp Tavern is 16 High Street, Dudley, DY1 1QT.
Unless otherwise stated, the indoor and Zoom meetings will normally open at 7.30 and lectures commence at 8.00.
Those wishing to attend field or geoconservation meetings please contact our Field Secretary (email address on the Contacts page).
Any non-members wishing to attend our virtual meetings should contact our Meetings Secretary for instructions (email address on the Contacts page).
Other contact details are also available on our Contact us page.
Updated 8 April 2026.
Members please check your email for any last minute changes.
Recordings of some of our virtual talks can be found on our YouTube channel.
Events in April–May 2026
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11 April (1 event)
Visit to the Ercall Quarries, Shropshire. Visit to the Ercall Quarries, Shropshire. 10.30 - 4.00
Saturday 11 April (Field Event): Visit to the Ercall Quarries, Shropshire. Leader David C Smith (SGS).
Park and meet at the Wrekin Forest Glen Car Park at 10.15 for a 10.30 start. Grid ref: SJ638092. Nearest PC: TF6 5AL. Parking charges apply (£4 all day). Alternative parking up the road at the Buckatree Hotel, grid ref: SJ640097. Or park on the roadside. Directions: from the M54, Junction 7, take the Holyhead Road (B5061) south towards the Wrekin (signposted less than a mile). Turn right at T‑junction. The car park is immediately on the left. We will spend the day looking at the Wrekin Quartzite and unconformities with the underlying Precambrian Uriconian Volcanics within the Ercall Quarry Nature Reserve. Lunch will be at the Buckatree Hotel. Either have food from the hotel or bring a packed lunch. Wear suitable outdoor clothing for the weather conditions. We will aim to finish this session around 3.30-4.00.
Click here for a Google map for Wrekin Forest Glen Car Park.
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20 April (1 event)
How geology made the Potteries How geology made the Potteries 8.00 -
Monday 20 April (Indoor Meeting): 'How geology made the Potteries'. Speaker: Bernard Besly (Retired Independent Consultant - Keele, Staffordshire).
The importance of geology in the industrial and urban development of North Staffordshire is usually reduced to a truism. Workable clays occurring with hot burning, long-flame coal gave the early potters a unique set of resources, and – in consequence - the pottery towns are developed along the line of their outcrop.
But why did this happen in North Staffordshire rather than the many other coalfield areas that have ample clay and coal? This talk intends to address some of the questions that underlie this set of generalisations. What is so special about the clay? What is “long flame coal” and why was it important for the pottery industry? Did any other geological circumstances lead to dominance of the Stoke area rather than other British Coalfields that also would appear to contain the magical ingredients of coal and clay?

To answer these questions, we need investigate the wider geological history and context:
• The controls on Carboniferous basin evolution that led to the deposition of unusual Coal Measures facies associations of thick palaeosols and algal rich coals;
• the roles of late Carboniferous climate and Variscan deformation in generating kaolinite dominated clays and red-beds of ‘lateritic’ character; and finally
• the ways in which Tertiary and Quaternary events controlled the areas of outcrop that allowed the early industrialists to become established in specific areas of the present city of Stoke-on-Trent.Bernard Besly moved to Keele University in 1976 to do his PhD on the sedimentology of the Etruria Formation. His career was largely spent working as a sedimentologist in the oil industry, initially with Shell and subsequently as a freelance. Throughout this period he has continued to study the Coal Measures and related Formations in the Midlands, occasionally for money but mainly as a hobby.
Click here for a Google map for The Lamp Tavern.
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9 May (2 events)
BCGS at the Perton Library Science Fair BCGS at the Perton Library Science Fair 10.00 - 3.00
Perton Library Science Fair - Saturday 9 May, 10.00 – 3.00
Severn Drive, Perton, WV6 7QU
BCGS will have a stand at the Science Fair and we will be promoting ourselves in the usual way with free leaflets, specimens to look at and a display. We've been asked to highlight the local glacial erratics, so the display will be featuring our recent involvement with the Birmingham Glacial Erratics project, and our more recent activities at Wightwick Manor and The Mount Hotel.
Come and visit our stand and enjoy the Science Fair – and don't miss the Perton Glacial Erratic Boulder.
The Perton erratic boulder has been put to good use as an RAF War Memorial and is only a few hundred metres away from Perton library, at the far corner of the Perton Centre car park off Severn Street.

Click here for a Google map for Perton Library.
iCalGeoconservation morning at Smestow Valley Geoconservation morning at Smestow Valley 10.00 - 12.30
Saturday 9 May (Geoconservation morning): Smestow Valley. Leaders: Smestow Valley Local Nature Reserve Wardens and Friends of Smestow Valley. Meet at Smestow Valley Local Nature Reserve, Meadow View Terrace, Wolverhampton WV6 8NX (Grid ref: SO 891 999), 09.45 for a 10.00 start. This event is for members of BCGS and the 'Friends of Smestow Local Nature Reserve' to undertake some clearance work of rock faces in the quarries and walk the Reserve whilst discussing future geoconservation possibilities at the site. Wear suitable outdoor clothing for the weather and vegetation conditions. Please bring thick gloves and loppers / cutting tools / long arm clippers. The Friends and Wardens can provide some hand tools. We will aim to finish this session around 12.30. Either bring a packed lunch or you can purchase lunch locally.
NB: This activity clashes with the Perton Library Science Fair which is just 4 miles away. After the morning's geoconservation session, why not visit the Science Fair in the afternoon? (It closes at 3.00.)
Click here for a Google map for Smestow Valley LNR.
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