The 'Oxford clays' are valuable for brickmaking when their use is understood, but to the uninitiated they are very troublesome. Their colour is dark blue or grey and they are usually stiff or somewhat shaly in texture with layers of variable composition. The closely associated Cornbrash (limestone) is a source of trouble unless great care is taken in the selection of the material. 'Oxford clays' are not infrequently traversed by seams of poor coal or by oil-shales.
Agriculturally, Oxford clay is difficult to work and, while much of it is valuable, large portions are poor and cold. When well exposed to frost it is made much lighter, but even then is not very suitable for wheat and autumn sown crops.
The 'Kellaway blue clays' are often included in the Oxford clays, though they form irregular bands above them and are of fresh-water origin, whilst the Oxford clays are marine deposits. They are chiefly used commercially for domestic firebricks near Oundle and Stamford.
Cretaceous clays occur, as their name implies, in association with chalk. The chief clay in this System is the gault, a stiff, black, calcareous clay of marine origin chiefly used for brickmaking. When used alone, gault burns to a reddish colour, due to the iron present, but if, as is more usual, it is mixed with chalk, it burns perfectly white. Some gaults contain sufficient chalk to render the addition of a further quantity unnecessary.
Agriculturally, the Cretaceous clays form good arable soil where they are not too exposed, but they suffer from drought.
The 'Wealden clay' is a stiff yellowish grey or blue clay extensively used for brickmaking in Kent, Sussex and Surrey. It has been subdivided by geologists into a number of other clays, such as the Wadhurst, Fairlight, etc., but the differences between them lie more in the fossils occurring in them than in the characters of the clays themselves. They are usually contaminated with ironstone, gypsum and some limestone.
Agriculturally, the Wealden clay produces stiff, yellowish soils of a wet and poor character, but sometimes loams of a highly productive nature occur.
The Tertiary clays include all those deposited after the Chalk and previous to the close of the Glacial period. They are usually mixed with sand and gravel, and though the deposits are often thin and irregular they are the most generally important of all clays. They vary greatly in character; some, like the London clay, being almost useless unless mixed with other materials, whilst others like the ball clays of Devonshire and Dorset are amongst the purest and most valuable of the plastic clays. The Tertiary clays are divided by geologists into Pliocene, Miocene and Eocene formations; of these the first are commercially unimportant and the second do not exist in Great Britain. At one time the Bovey Tracey clays were considered to be Miocene, but they have recently been classed as Oligocene by Clement Reid.