Combe Down and Bathampton Down Mines

Combe Down and Bathampton Down Mines
Combe Down and Bathampton Down Mines
Site of Special Scientific Interest
Tunnel between roughly hewn stone walls
Combe Down and Bathampton Down Mines is located in Somerset
{{{alt}}}
Shown within Somerset
Area of Search Avon
Grid reference ST761625
Coordinates 51°21′40″N 2°20′41″W / 51.36106°N 2.34465°W / 51.36106; -2.34465Coordinates: 51°21′40″N 2°20′41″W / 51.36106°N 2.34465°W / 51.36106; -2.34465
Interest Biological
Area 15.37 acres (0.0622 km2; 0.02402 sq mi)
Notification 1991 (1991)
Natural England website

Combe Down and Bathampton Down Mines (grid reference ST761625) is a 6.22 hectare (15.37 acre) Site of Special Scientific Interest (SSSI) in Bath and North East Somerset, notified in 1991 because of the Greater and Lesser Horseshoe bat population.[1]

The disused mines dates from the 17th and 18th Century and were used to extract Bath stone for the city of Bath and elsewhere in the UK.

A five-year project to stabilise the mine workings was largely completed by November 2009.

Contents

Geology

Combe Down forms a plateau capped by Great Oolite limestones between the valley of the River Avon and Horsecombe Vale. The geology of the region is dominated by rocks of Middle and Early Jurassic ages. The Great Oolite is the uppermost lithology. This is underlain by the clays of the Fuller’s Earth Formation, which in turn is underlain by limestones of the Inferior Oolite and the Midford Sands of the Lias. The Great and Inferior Oolite formations provide effective aquifers (rock in which water can be stored and pass through) for public and private water supplies.[2]

History

The Great Oolite stone, used for building purposes, formed over 146 million years ago when the area was underneath a deep tropical sea on which the shells of ooliths were deposited. The ooliths bonded together to form the distinctive rock known as oolitic limestone or locally as ‘Bath stone’. The Romans found that it was easily worked and used it for important fortifications. During the 17th Century, small quarries were opened, with major quarries being developed in the 18th Century to produce the Bath stone used for many of the buildings in Bath and elsewhere in the UK, including Buckingham Palace. Stone was extracted by the "room and pillar" method, by which chambers were mined, leaving pillars of stone to support the roof.[2] These mines were once owned by Postmaster General Ralph Allen (1694-1764).

The mines contain a range of features including well preserved tramways, cart-roads and crane bases. The walls and pillars are studded with pick and tool marks and show evidence of the use of huge stone saws, all of which bear testimony to the variety of techniques used to extract the stone over the mine's three hundred year history.[3]

No mine abandonment plans - either of the tunnels or the caverns, known as voids - were made prior to the 1872 Mining Act.[2]

During 1989 a utilities contractor unexpectedly broke through into part of the mine complex whilst excavating a trench, which resulted in Bath City Council commissioning studies to survey the condition of the mines. It was clear that the mines were in very unstable and some experts considered them to be the largest, shallowest and most unstable of their kind in Europe.[4]

Mine and environmental survey

An underground survey of the Firs and Byfield mine areas was carried out in 1994, commissioned by the then Bath City Council. It was found that approximately 80% of the mines had less than 6 m cover and as little as 2 m in some places.[5] Irregular mining and robbing stone from supporting pillars had left the mines unstable.[2]

Greater Horseshoe Bat

An Environmental Impact Assessment was completed for the stabilisation scheme and submitted to the Local Planning Authority in December 2002. This highlighted that the mine is; within the World Heritage Site of the City of Bath; adjacent to the Cotswold Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty (AONB), within a conservation area, containing a number of Listed buildings; a Site of Special Scientific Interest; a candidate Special Area of Conservation; of international importance for Greater and Lesser Horseshoe bats; and of international geological importance partly due to the work of William Smith.[2] [1] Ritchies contract to create bat tunnels

During the access and emergency works Oxford Archaeology produced large scale plans of visible areas and substantial photography was carried out as the modern roadways allowed access. There were also trials of video photography and laser scanning, so that a substantial record was produced of some 20% of the known workings.[3]

The mine also lies above a Grade 1 aquifer from which water for public and private use is extracted via the springs that issue at the base of these units, in particular at the Prior Park, Whittaker and Tucking Mill springs.[2]

Mine stabilisation project

In March 1999, the then Department of Environment, Transport and Regions (DETR) announced a Land Stabilisation Programme, based on the Derelict Land Act 1982. This was designed to “deal with abandoned non-coal mine workings which are likely to collapse and threaten life and property”. A Bath and North East Somerset Council outline bid for a two-phase stabilisation project was accepted in August 1999, by English Partnerships who administered the programme for the then Office of the Deputy Prime Minister.[2] A parliamentary Statutory Instrument (2002 No. 2053) was needed before the work could be undertaken.[6]

Approximately 760 properties were included within the planning application boundary - estimates were that ca. 1660 people lived within this area, which also included a primary school, a nursery and 3 churches.

Foamed concrete was selected as the solution for the large scale infilling of the old mine works: the single largest application of foamed concrete on a project in the UK.

The work was largely complete by November 2009, by which time approximately 600,000 cubic metres of foamed concrete had been used to fill 25 hectares of very shallow limestone mine, making it the largest project of its kind in the world.[7]

References

External links


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужно решить контрольную?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Combe Down — Coordinates: 51°21′40″N 2°20′33″W / 51.3610°N 2.3425°W / 51.3610; 2.3425 …   Wikipedia

  • Bath and North East Somerset — Infobox Settlement official name = Bath and North East Somerset nickname = BANES or B NES settlement type = unitary authority motto = imagesize = image caption = flag size = image seal size = image shield = shield size = image blank emblem =… …   Wikipedia

  • Congrove Field and The Tumps — Site of Special Scientific Interest …   Wikipedia

  • Bath Stone — is an Oolitic Limestone comprising granular fragments of calcium carbonate. Originally obtained from the Combe Down and Bathampton Down Mines under Combe Down, Somerset, England, its warm, honey colouring gives the World Heritage City of Bath,… …   Wikipedia

  • Bath, Somerset — Coordinates: 51°23′N 2°22′W /  …   Wikipedia

  • Bath Stone — Royal Crescent in Bath …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Compton Martin Ochre Mine — Site of Special Scientific Interest The site of Compton Martin Ochre Mine …   Wikipedia

  • Somerset — Para otros usos de este término, véase Somerset (desambiguación). Somerset Condado de Inglater …   Wikipedia Español

  • Bath — ██████████5 % …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Chew Valley Lake — Chew Valley Lake …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”