risy76115
  • risy76115
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rufenig
10 years ago
The 6 inch map appears to line up with "Brick fields"
Possible clay extraction?

http://maps.nls.uk/view/102343343 
Lister
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10 years ago
Chalk Mine not too far away?

http://www.aditnow.co.uk/Mines/Roughdown-Common-Chalk-Mine_9680/ 


'Adventure is just bad planning' Roald Amundsen
Peter Burgess
10 years ago
In chalk country, brick fields = chalk mine all too often.
Peter Burgess
10 years ago
http://maps.nls.uk/view/104201245 

25 inch map. See the brickworks on the other side of the road to the south a bit.
Peter Burgess
10 years ago
The overlay shows the affected road built right over one of the old pits.

http://maps.nls.uk/geo/explore/#zoom=17&lat=51.7632&lon=-0.3292&layers=171 
Peter Burgess
10 years ago
It's on the 6 o'clock news in a mo. Let's see if they blame it on natural chalk solution!
Dr J
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10 years ago
"Peter Burgess" wrote:

In chalk country, brick fields = chalk mine all too often.



Absolutely spot on, historical chalk mine for sure, size of the collapse and coincidence with the extractive land-use say all that needs to be said. Same circumstances as so many of those 'sink holes' we've heard about in the south, southeast of the last few years...
Over-ground, underground, wombling free...
Peter Burgess
10 years ago
No mention of chalk mines from the BGS(?) "expert" on BBC news this morning. Only clay extraction on this site, with underlying chalk which dissolves in water (no, it doesn't! - not like that anyway).

To put it on record, yellow stock bricks, common in London and the south east, are made by adding chalk to the clay before firing. Where does the chalk come from? Often from mines directly underneath the brick-clay deposit.
Peter Burgess
10 years ago
Two opinions from "experts".

http://www.sciencemediacentre.org/expert-reaction-to-the-st-albans-sinkhole/ 

Chalk mines are generally OK places regarding stability, but don't take kindly to having residential developments placed above them that disrupt the distribution of groundwater. This happens by the construction of soakaways, and large areas of impermeable tarmac and concrete. It's not as if this hasn't happened before, several times over several decades. :(

Peter Burgess
10 years ago
At the risk of being thought to be labouring the point, here is a good paper which covers why chalk mines underlie brickfields, based on a surviving chalk mine in Kent.

www.kentarchaeology.ac/authors/Kidd'sCMDartford.pdf
derrickhand
10 years ago
Towards the end of the Coombe Down job (late 09/early 10) there was a job in that area involving backfilling old chalk mine workings in a residential area. Atkins were the consultants, I believe Roger Bullivant got the drilling and grouting but I wouldn't be certain about that.


plus ca change, plus c'est le meme chose
Peter Burgess
10 years ago
The Reading job, possibly.
Peter Burgess
10 years ago
Yet another geologist trotted out on the BBC London news saying its just due to rainwater dissolving away the chalk. :guns:
Tamarmole
10 years ago
"Peter Burgess" wrote:

At the risk of being thought to be labouring the point, here is a good paper which covers why chalk mines underlie brickfields, based on a surviving chalk mine in Kent.

www.kentarchaeology.ac/authors/Kidd'sCMDartford.pdf



Fascinating - thanks for posting.
Peter Burgess
10 years ago
Various pages I have found on brickmaking on Bernard Heath mention clay pits and so on. One map shows two limekilns. We could assume that chalk was being worked to feed the kilns, probably in connection with brickmaking. I can find no mention of chalk mines, however.

http://www.hertfordshire-genealogy.co.uk/data/projects/bernardsheath/bh-intro.htm 
Dr J
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10 years ago
Turns out the mines were once alive too, who knew?! :lol:

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-34428892 


Over-ground, underground, wombling free...
Vanoord
10 years ago
BGS are now citing a brickworks...

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-34421687 


Hello BGS people! 😮 :lol:
Hello again darkness, my old friend...
Peter Burgess
10 years ago
Has anybody cottoned on to underlying chalk being mined? Spot the two limekilns on the site of the brickworks, and the known connection, well-documented by people who actually know about these things, between chalk and brick-making.
Duh.
Aztelquian
9 years ago
Interestingly, chalk sometimes collapses into sinkholes but an entirely different type of mine/ quarry is to blame: In Corfe (Purbeck, Dorset) there are 6-8 small old sinkholes in the lower slopes of the chalk hill but it was actually tunnels in a marl mine that caved in the strata above.

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