This view is of Carl Wark (left) and Higger Tor still clinging to snow on their eastern slopes.
This view is of Carl Wark (left) and Higger Tor still clinging to snow on their eastern slopes.
T.D. Ford & J.H. Rieuwerts (2000) Landmark Publishing
Introduction: Geology
The common ores mined in the Peak District are GALENA (lead sulphide), SPHALERITE (zinc sulphide), FLUORITE (calcium fluoride), BARYTE (barium sulphate) and CALCITE (calcium carbonate).
RAKES are major veins formed in vertical fissures often 2-3 m wide but up to 15 m wide. They can be 4-5 km long and some have been mined to 200 m deep.
SCRINS are smaller versions of rakes not often more than 50 cm across and 1 km long.
FLATS are horizontal deposits laying parallel to the bedding.
PIPES are irregular deposits parallel to the bedding.
Pipes and flats are often close to or capped by thin volcanic deposits know as wayboards.
The mineral deposits were formed from hot fluids which came from 2-3 km below the surface and picked up minerals on the way. These were precipitated by cooling, mixing with cooler surface waters, reaction with sulphur compounds in pore waters or reaction with oxygen in such waters. This reached a climax at the end of the Carboniferous 270 million years ago.
Galena (PbS) is easily recognised by its silvery metallic lustre. Veins contained form as much as 10% to as little as 2%. The veins along the eastern margin of the mineral field also contained sphalerite (ZnS) recognised by its dark brown chocolate colour and also known as blende or blackjack. It had little value until brass (an alloy of zinc and copper) became popular in Victorian times. In a few areas the sulphides have been oxidised to carbonates, cerussite (lead carbonate) and smithsonite (zinc carbonate, commonly known as calamine). Cerussite is the raw material for white lead and several White Rakes are allegedly named after it. The gangue minerals of metal extraction were fluorspar, barytes and calcite. Nowadays these are the main products and metallic ores are byproducts. Fluorspar (CaF) is the chief source of fluorine for the chemical industry. It is largely confined to a 2 km wide strip at the eastern margin of the ore field. Baryte (BaSO4) and calcite (CaCO3) complete the 5 minerals which form the bulk of the mining activity in the Peak District.
This is followed by a comprehensive history of mining in the Peak District and then a list of itineries.
Itineraries:
1. Castleton
2. Peak Forest
3. Hucklow, Eyam, & Stoney Middleton Area
4. Sheldon & the Magpie Mine
5. The Ashford Black Marble Mines & Mill
6. The Lathkill Dale Mines
7. Hillocks & Knotlow Mines, Monyash
8. The Alport Mines
9. The Lead Mining Village of Winster
10. The Wensley-Darley Area & Mill Close Mine
11. The Matlock Area
12. Cromford & Bole Hill
13. Good Luck Mine, Middleton-By-Wirksworth
14. Wirksworth
15. Carsington Pasture & Brassington
16. The Crich Area
17. Stonedge Cupola, Ashover
18. The Ecton Copper Mines
I sketched the relationship between the various gritstone edges using SketchBook Pro overlaying the OS map so that the relationships are to scale.
The main edges (Stanage to Gardom's) are of Chatsworth Grit (318-319 million years). White Edge and Birchen Edge are made of younger Crawshaw Sandstone (314-316 million years) while the lower Bamford Edge is of older Kinderscout Grit (319-321 million years).
The Caledonian Orogeny produced highlands (Southern Uplands, Anglo-Brabant, Welsh) by crustal shortening and uplift. Post orogenic granite blocks such as the Alston and Askrigg were also emergent. These persisted while crustal extension in the early Carboniferous created a series of rift basins around them. When rifting slowed the thermal relaxation of the crust led to thermal sag basins.
To put the Carboniferous into context I re-read the Open University book in the title of the post. I possess no artistic skills at all but have drawn the following cartoons which shows the main stages with no reference to paleolatitude. They are obviously not to scale or the correct shape either!
Scotland and the rest of the British Isles are on different landmasses |
Avalonia separates from Gondwana and begins its journey across the Iapetus |
The Iapetus closes, the Rheic opens |
Laurentia, Baltica and Avalonia collide in the Caledonian Orogeny as the Iapetus finally closes |
The Rheic closes and Pangea forms in the Variscan Orogeny |
Alder
|
*Wet, usually beside a stream or river.
Indicates land liable to flood
|
Beech
|
Well-drained; often suffers from die-back
on poorly-drained soils
|
Bilberry
|
*Acid, *poor
|
Bramble
|
Well-drained but moist
|
Bog-myrtle
|
*Wet, acid
|
Broom
|
Acid, sandy
|
Chestnut, sweet
|
Acid, sandy, but often planted on other
soils
|
Elder
|
Rich, usually alkaline
|
Elm, suckering
|
Very typical of clay, but in some areas
also on sandy, gravelly soil
|
Elm, wych
|
Alkaline, often on a clay over limestone
|
Gorse, common
|
Well drained
usually sandy, poor; but increasingly found on a wider range of soils
|
Gorse, dwarf and western
|
Acid, not necessarily well drained
|
Guelder rose
|
Moist to wet, usually alkaline
|
Heath, cross leaved
|
*Acid, poor, wet
|
Heather, bell
|
*Acid, poor, dry
|
Heather, common or ling
|
*Acid, poor, moist
|
Old man’s beard or wild clematis
|
*Alkaline
|
Rhododendron
|
*Acid
|
Rowan
|
Typical of light
acid soils but also very occasionally on limestone
|
Scots pine
|
Acid, but often planted on other soils
|
Spindle
|
Alkaline
|
Wayfaring tree
|
*Alkaline
|
Whitebeam
|
Well drained, limestone or light sands
|
Willows, except goat willow
|
Wet
|
Yew
|
Especially common on chalk but also on
other well-drained soils
|
Agrimony
|
Well drained
|
Birdsfoot trefoil
|
Low nitrogen
|
Bog asphodel
|
Wet, *acid, *poor
|
Bracken
|
*Well-drained, usually acid, usually
sandy when abundant
|
Buttercup, bulbous
|
Well-drained
|
Buttercup, creeping
|
Moist, compacted or heavy
|
Buttercup, meadow
|
Moist
|
Chickweed
|
Rich
|
Coltsfoot
|
Heavy
|
Cow wheat, common and small
|
Acid
|
Corn spurrey
|
Poor, acid
|
Cuckoo flower or Lady’s smock
|
Moist
|
Dead nettle, white and red
|
Rich
|
Dock, broad leaved
|
*Rich
|
Fat hen
|
Rich
|
Fleabane
|
Damp
|
Foxglove
|
Acid
|
Goosegrass or cleavers
|
Rich
|
Harebell
|
Well-drained
|
Heath bedstraw
|
Acid
|
Hemp agrimony
|
Damp to wet
|
Horseshoe vetch
|
*Alkaline, * dry; limestone or chalk
|
Horsetail
|
Wet subsoil
|
Kidney vetch
|
Well drained, usually alkaline
|
Marjoram
|
Well drained, usually alkaline
|
Meadowsweet
|
Moist to wet
|
Nettle, annual or small
|
Rich
|
Nettle, stinging
|
*Rich, especially in phosphorus
|
Opium poppy
|
Rich
|
Orache
|
Rich
|
Pineapple weed
|
Compacted
|
Plantain, greater
|
Compacted
|
Pyramidal orchid
|
Alkaline
|
Ragged robin
|
Wet, not very acid
|
Reed
|
Usually on soil flooded for at least part
of the year
|
Rush, hard
|
*Wet, alkaline
|
Rush, soft
|
*Wet, acid
|
Salad burnett
|
Alkaline, dry
|
Sheep’s sorrel
|
*Acid, dry
|
Silverweed
|
*Compacted or damp
|
Sorrel, common
|
Poor
|
Stinking iris
|
Alkaline
|
Thistle, creeping
|
Often compacted subsoil, fairly rich
|
Thyme
|
Dry, usually alkaline
|
Tormentil, common
|
Acid, poor
|
Willowherb, great hairy
|
Damp
|
Wood sorrel
|
Usually acid
|