Palaeogene fluvial deposits in southern Britain have four distinct and interesting characteristics. First, the river systems were initiated on a ‘blank canvas’ of Cretaceous Chalk left exposed and deeply eroded because of a relative fall in sea-level. Second, river hydrology was controlled by the abnormally warm, wet subtropical climate of the Eocene which includes several short-lived but intense global warming events. Third, the river systems occupied a lowland coastal belt at the southern margin of the North Sea Basin and nearly all of the fluvial deposits contain evidence for marine influence. Fourth, tectonic compression related to Alpine mountain building may (or may not) have been important in creating an undulating landscape of growt...