Oolite stone6/15/2023 ![]() No mine abandonment plans – either of the tunnels or the caverns, known as voids – were made prior to the 1872 Mining Act. 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 their three hundred-year history. The mines contain a range of features including well preserved tramways, cart-roads and crane bases. These mines were once owned by Postmaster General Ralph Allen (1694–1764). Stone was extracted by the "room and pillar" method, by which chambers were mined, leaving pillars of stone to support the roof. During the 17th century, small quarries were opened, with major quarries being developed in the 18th century to produce the stone used for many of the buildings in Bath and elsewhere in the UK, including Buckingham Palace. ![]() The Romans found that it was easily worked and used it for important fortifications. The ooliths bonded together to form the distinctive rock known as oolitic limestone or locally as Bath stone. 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 ooliths were deposited. 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. ![]() The Great Oolite is the uppermost lithology, 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 geology of the region is dominated by rocks of Middle and Early Jurassic ages. A five-year project to stabilise the quarry workings was largely completed by November 2009.Ĭombe Down forms a plateau capped by Great Oolite limestones between the valley of the River Avon and Horsecombe Vale. The disused quarries date from the 17th and 18th centuries and were the source of Bath stone for the city of Bath and elsewhere in the UK. 51☂1′40″N 2☂0′41″W / 51.36106°N 2.34465°W / 51.36106 -2.34465Ĭombe Down and Bathampton Down Quarries ( grid reference ST761625) make up a 6.22 hectare (15.37 acre) Site of Special Scientific Interest (SSSI) in Bath and North East Somerset, England, important for its bat population.
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