Image
Sea Thrift
Identifier
Armeria Maritima
Date of Entry
28/08/2010
Coordinates
54.870777, -1.354662
Location Description
Marshy lowland near Ryhope
Author
Marie Cole
Author Notes
N/A
Source
N/A
Sea Thrift
Identifier
Armeria Maritima
Date of Entry
28/08/2010
Coordinates
54.870777, -1.354662
Location Description
Marshy lowland near Ryhope
Author
Marie Cole
Author Notes
N/A
Source
N/A
Image
Fairy Cushion
Identifier
Armeria Maritima
Date of Entry
14/08/2018
Coordinates
55.675634, -1.781104
Location Description
Holy Island Cliffs
Author
John Seymour
Author Notes
N/A
Source
N/A
Fairy Cushion
Identifier
Armeria Maritima
Date of Entry
14/08/2018
Coordinates
55.675634, -1.781104
Location Description
Holy Island Cliffs
Author
John Seymour
Author Notes
N/A
Source
N/A
Image
Sea Pink
Identifier
Armeria Maritima
Date of Entry
02/04/2024
Coordinates
54.753832, -1.282239
Location Description
Cliffs near Peterlee
Author
Katherine Watts
Author Notes
N/A
Source
N/A
Sea Pink
Identifier
Armeria Maritima
Date of Entry
02/04/2024
Coordinates
54.753832, -1.282239
Location Description
Cliffs near Peterlee
Author
Katherine Watts
Author Notes
N/A
Source
N/A
Image
Rock Rose
Identifier
Armeria Maritima
Date of Entry
06/07/2019
Coordinates
54.845290, -1.334959
Location Description
Rocky Pile in Seaham
Author
Sean James
Author Notes
N/A
Source
N/A
Rock Rose
Identifier
Armeria Maritima
Date of Entry
06/07/2019
Coordinates
54.845290, -1.334959
Location Description
Rocky Pile in Seaham
Author
Sean James
Author Notes
N/A
Source
N/A
Image
Sea Pink
Text
Drawing completed on Mackintosh‘s honeymoon with Margaret Macdonald to Lindisfarne in 1901. The work depicts the plant in different stages of growth and decomposition.
Date of Entry
1901
Author
Charles Rennie Mackintosh
Dimenions
145 mm x 180 mm
Medium
Watercolour and Pencil on Paper
Source
https://museums.eu/collection/object/150469/sea-pink-holy-island-july-1901
Sea Pink
Text
Drawing completed on Mackintosh‘s honeymoon with Margaret Macdonald to Lindisfarne in 1901. The work depicts the plant in different stages of growth and decomposition.
Date of Entry
1901
Author
Charles Rennie Mackintosh
Dimenions
145 mm x 180 mm
Medium
Watercolour and Pencil on Paper
Source
https://museums.eu/collection/object/150469/sea-pink-holy-island-july-1901
Image
Sea Pink (Detail)
Text
Drawing completed on Mackintosh‘s honeymoon with Margaret Macdonald to Lindisfarne in 1901. The work depicts the plant in different stages of growth and decomposition.
Date of Entry
1901
Author
Charles Rennie Mackintosh
Dimenions
145 mm x 180 mm
Medium
Watercolour and Pencil on Paper
Source
https://museums.eu/collection/object/150469/sea-pink-holy-island-july-1901
Sea Pink (Detail)
Text
Drawing completed on Mackintosh‘s honeymoon with Margaret Macdonald to Lindisfarne in 1901. The work depicts the plant in different stages of growth and decomposition.
Date of Entry
1901
Author
Charles Rennie Mackintosh
Dimenions
145 mm x 180 mm
Medium
Watercolour and Pencil on Paper
Source
https://museums.eu/collection/object/150469/sea-pink-holy-island-july-1901
Thrifty
Text
The Sea Thrift adorned one side of the Threepence coin until 1971, when the decimal system was introduced across British currency.
The plant’s connection to small coinage originates with the Old English word thrift (rooted in the Old Norse þrift), meaning frugality or prosperity. As a symbol of modesty and prudence, it was chosen to appear on one of the smallest denominations of change.
The origin of the plant name itself also shares the same seed, as the Sea Thrift was known across the North East of England for its resourcesfullness when conserving water.
The coin was forged from brass, an alloy of copper and zinc - minerals found in the soils where the Sea Thrift flourishes.
Date of Entry
1948
Author
Royal Mint
Metallophyte
Text
Armeria maritima flourish within metal-rich soils, particularly those containing copper, and can tolerate concentrations exceeding 6,000 mg/kg of Cu. As a result, it is often found on coastlands and rocky outcrops near sites of mineral extraction and processing.
While heavy metals are typically toxic to most plants, the Sea Thrift has developed an exceptional resistance and intimacy with these virulent minerals, sequestering copper, but also cadmium, mercury, zinc, nickel, iron, and manganese, in its cells.
Copper, absorbed through the subsurface rhizome, is stored in both roots and leaves, where it becomes bound within protein chains. As concentrations rise, the accumulated metal can seep from the cells, crystallising as a visible precipitate on the leaf surface — patinating verdigris upon verdure.
Dried Flowers
Text
The dessicated flowers of the Thrift have antibiotic properties and have been traditionally used to treat infections and as a diuretic.
Dessicated leaves have also long been utilised as a garnish for soups in coastal villages, adding a characteristically salty flavour.
Date of Entry
1597
Author
John Gerard
Sources
John Gerard, Generall Historie of Plantes, 1597.
https://archive.org/details/mobot31753000817749/page/703/mode/1up?view=theater
1597
Author
John Gerard
Sources
John Gerard, Generall Historie of Plantes, 1597.
https://archive.org/details/mobot31753000817749/page/703/mode/1up?view=theater
Halophyte
Text
The Sea Thrift is most commonly associated with coastal outcrops, salt marshes, and littoral shingle. These highly saline conditions are tolerated by the plant as its leaves possess glands which can secrete excess sodium and chlorine.
As levels of salt increase, the leaves produce amino acids and proteins - proline and belatains repsectively - that protect cells. They also pigment the leaves and petals with pink-red-yellow hues.
Thrift
Author
Robert Macfarlane
Narrators (In order or appearance)
Jackie Hagan
Marina Poppa
Glen Greaves
Phedra Broch
Clare Ibberson-John
Clare Shaw
Sound Editing
JasmineGreaves
Sea Thrift