- Hushing
Hushing is an ancient
mining method using a flood or torrent of water to reveal mineral veins. [cite web
url=http://www.durham-miner.org.uk/miner/projects.nsf/581cd74a9c6aa8b080256d48003758cb/6c0a47fe223b390880256e82004577a2?OpenDocument
title=Durham Miner Project - Lead Mining - Methods used
publisher=www.durham-miner.org.uk
accessdate=2008-04-24] [cite web
url=http://www.keystothepast.info/durhamcc/k2p.nsf/k2pGlossaryList?readform&letter=H
title=Glossary
publisher=www.keystothepast.info
accessdate=2008-04-24] The method was applied in several ways, both in prospecting for ores, and for their exploitation. Mineral veins are often hidden below soil and sub-soil, which must be stripped away to discover the ore veins. A flood of water is very effective in moving soil as well as working the ore deposits when combined with other methods such asfire-setting . It was used widely from during the formation and expansion of theRoman Empire from the first century BC on to the end of the empire. It is now redundant except in a variant known ashydraulic mining , where jets or streams of water are used to break down deposits, especially of alluvialgold and alluvialtin .History
The method is well described by
Pliny the Elder in Book XXXIII of hisNaturalis Historia from the first century AD. He distinguishes the use of the method for prospecting for ore and use during mining itself. It was used during the Roman period forhydraulic mining of alluvialgold deposits, and in opencast vein mining, for removal of rock debris, created by mechanical attack andfire-setting . He describes how tanks and reservoirs are built near the suspected veins, filled with water from an aqueduct, and the water suddenly released from a sluice-gate onto the hillside below, scouring the soil away to reveal the bedrock and any veins occurring there. The power behind a large release of water is very great, especially if it forms a singlewater wave , and is well known as a strong force incoastal erosion andriver erosion . The method was most effective when used on steep ground such as the brow of a hill or mountain, the force of falling water lessening as the slope becomes smaller. If veins of ore were found using the method, then hushing could also remove the rock debris created when attacking the veins. Pliny also describes the way hillsides could be undermined, and then collapsed to release the ore-bearing material. The Romans developed the method into a sophisticated way of extracting large alluvial gold deposits such as those atLas Medulas in northernSpain , and for hard rock gold veins such as those atDolaucothi inWales . The development of the mine at Dolaucothi shows the versatility of the method in finding and then exploiting ore deposits.There are the remains of numerous tanks and reservoirs still to be seen at the site, one example being shown at left. It was a small tank built for prospection on the north side of the isolated opencast north of the main mine. It was presumably built to prospect the ground to one side of the opencast for traces of the gold-bearing veins extending to the north. It failed to find the veins here, so was abandoned. It probably precedes the construction of the 7 mile long
aqueduct supplying the main site, and was fed by a smallleat from a tributary of the river Cothi about a mile further north up the valley. The method could be applied to any ore type, and succeeded best in hilly terrain. The Romans were well experienced in building the long aqueducts needed to supply the large volumes of water needed by the method, and was probably directed by army engineers.Earlier evidence
The earlier history of the method is obscure, although there is an intriguing reference by
Strabo writing ca 25 BC in hisGeographica , to gold extraction in theVal d'Aosta in theAlps . He describes the problem gold miners had with a local tribe because of the great volumes of water they had taken from the local river, reducing it to a trickle and so affecting the local farmers. Whether or not they used the water for hushing remains unknown, but it seems possible because the method requires large volumes of water to be operated. Later, when the Romans assumed control of the mining operations, the locals charged them for using the water. The tribe occupied the higher mountains and controlled the water sources, and had not yet been subdued by the Romans.The historian
Polybius , who lived from 220 to 170 BC was writing much earlier in "The Histories", and he records thatgold mining in theAlpine region was so successful that the price of gold in Italy fell by a third during this period. From his description of large nuggets, and the find being made only two feet below the ground level, with deposits reaching down to 15 feet, it is likely to have been analluvial deposit where water methods such as hushing would have been very effective. Modern attempts to identify the mines point to one especially large ancient gold mine at Bessa in NorthernItaly . It appears to have been worked intensively in pre-Roman days and continued to expand with Roman involvement. The scale of the aqueducts there seems to support Strabo's comments.Later examples
The technique appears to have been neglected through the medieval period, because
Georg Agricola , writing in the 15th century in hisDe Re Metallica , does not mention hushing at all. On the other hand, he does describe the many uses of water power, especially for washing ore and drivingwatermills .However, the technique was used on a large scale in the
lead mines of northern Britain from Elizabethan times onwards. The method is described in the Royal Commission on Children in Mines in 1842 in relation to children being used in the lead mines of the Pennines. The remnants of the "hush gullies" are visible at many places in the Pennines as well as at many other locations such as the extensive lead mines at Cwmystwyth inCeredigion , and at theStiperstones inShropshire .One famous and spectacular example is the
Great Dun Fell hush gully nearCross Fell ,Cumbria , probably formed inGeorgian era in the search forlead andsilver . Thegully is about 100 feet deep, carries a small stream, and is a prominentlandmark on the bleak moors.Although the Cornish did not use the term "hushing", there is at least one reference to the technique being used at
Tregardock inNorth Cornwall . Around 1580 mine adventurers used the method to work a lead-silver deposit, although lives were lost in the attempt. [cite web
url=http://www.cornwall.gov.uk/media/pdf/h/0/aa11_1.pdf
title=Archaeology Alive, volume 11.
publisher=The Historic Environment Service, Cornwall County Council
pages=37
accessdate=2008-04-24]ee also
*
Dartmoor tin-mining
*Derbyshire lead mining history
*Dolaucothi
*Hydraulic mining
*Las Medulas
*Mining in Cornwall
*Placer mining
*Roman engineering
*Roman mining References
* Oliver Davies, "Roman Mines in Europe", Clarendon Press (Oxford), 1935.
* Jones G. D. B., I. J. Blakey, and E. C. F. MacPherson, "Dolaucothi: the Roman aqueduct", Bulletin of the Board of Celtic Studies 19 (1960): 71-84 and plates III-V.
* Lewis, P. R. and G. D. B. Jones, "The Dolaucothi gold mines, I: the surface evidence", The Antiquaries Journal, 49, no. 2 (1969): 244-72.
* Lewis, P. R. and G. D. B. Jones, "Roman gold-mining in north-west Spain", Journal of Roman Studies 60 (1970): 169-85.
* Lewis, P. R., "The Ogofau Roman gold mines at Dolaucothi", The National Trust Year Book 1976-77 (1977).
* Annels, A and Burnham, BC, "The Dolaucothi Gold Mines", University of Wales, Cardiff, 3rd Ed (1995).
* Hodge, A.T. (2001). "Roman Aqueducts & Water Supply", 2nd ed. London: Duckworth.External links
* [http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=TS1vx7eHjUkC&pg=PA16&dq=hushing+mines#PPA16,M1 Royal Commission on Children in Mines describes hushing in 1842]
* [http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=6L1vtSHSbrAC&pg=PA629&lpg=PA629&dq=hushing+in+mines&source=web&ots=o2L2TcWAae&sig=uxQlSyFF8hr6v4YBvpqVB4ajQaU&hl=en Roman technology]
* [http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=tKK1tnLhInQC&pg=PA144&lpg=PA144&dq=hushing+in+mines&source=web&ots=3iFLeLaQ_6&sig=nzYnmlhavjHmx3adZRVaVG45WSw&hl=en Hushing in Yorkshire mines]
* [http://www.leaney.org/lake_district_search.php?match=0&cat=&searchword=Hush Great Dun Fell hush gulley]
* [http://www.mylearning.org/jpage.asp?jpageid=413&journeyid=119 Hushing in Gunnerdale, Yorkshire]
* [http://www.bessa.it/english.htm Roman gold mine with numerous aqueducts]
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.