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Compton Bay Isle of Wight

Beach • Isle of Wight • PO30 4HB

Compton Bay on the southwest coast of the Isle of Wight is one of the finest beaches on the island, a broad expanse of sand and low cliff backed by the distinctive coloured sandstone and clay cliffs of the southwest Isle of Wight coast where the Cretaceous and older geological formations are exposed in a sequence that makes this section of coast one of the most productive fossil localities in southern England. The bay is part of the Isle of Wight Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty and provides excellent surfing in the Atlantic swell that reaches this exposed west-facing coast.

The cliffs at Compton Bay and the adjacent Hanover Point expose a sequence of geological formations ranging from the Wealden clays of the earliest Cretaceous through various younger formations, and the coastal erosion that maintains the beach by supplying new sediment also constantly exposes new fossils from the Wealden. Dinosaur footprints are among the finds from the Hanover Point outcrops, and the beach is a well-known locality for Cretaceous plant fossils, wood fragments and occasional vertebrate remains.

The beach faces west and southwest and receives swell from the Channel approaches that provides consistent surfing conditions, particularly in autumn and winter when the westerly weather systems are most active. The coast path along the clifftop from Compton Bay provides excellent walking with views of the Needles to the north and the west-facing coast of the island extending southward.

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