Of interest concerning the construction of the Carsington Reservoir, is the fact that it uses the the water being drained from the Wirksworth lead mines and surrounding area by one of the largest of the Derbyshire soughs i.e. the Merebrook sough (driven from 1772 to 1848 at a cost of approximately £80,000, it's total length with branches being about five miles - tradition has that it was constructed by convict labour i.e. French prisoners of war during the Napoleonic Wars). The outflow is mainly used for the public water supply by the Severn Trent Water Authority, in 1950 the average flow was 15 million gallons a day, ranging from 11 to 19 million gallons daily, and in 1961 the Water Authority was allowed to extract 11 million gallons daily. The surplus flows into the River Derwent from the sough tail (found north of Whatstandwell Bridge, up river, on the west bank of the River Derwent, just below the Holmesford Cottage Public House's car park on the A6) and adds to the volumne of the river water. However, south of Whatstandwell Bridge, again on the west bank of the River Derwent the tunnel driven by Mowlem the contractors (from memory wasn't it the original firm of contractors [Shepherd's] that went bankrupt, there were a couple or more deaths as well) goes through to the Carsington Reservoir. So in effect water drained from beneath Wirksworth is being pumped, from below the outfall of the Merebrook sough, out of the River Derwent and back into the reservoir. A good example of recycling!