thomas
  • thomas
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17 years ago
are there in the eria of Shropshire border Wales any Roman or older remains of Quarry's and mines??

and what are the nice place's to look for minerals.

thank you Thomas
ben88800
17 years ago
Hello Thomas

You might want to check out the crystals in uk thread under the general chat heading in the forum. there should be some very old mines in that area of the country but i dont know much about that area

Regards

Ben
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AR
  • AR
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17 years ago
http://www.derbyscc.org.uk/alderley/index.html 

As for the mineral collecting, that can be a rather explosive topic on this site, as you'll see if you read the crystals thread.... 😮
Follow the horses, Johnny my laddie, follow the horses canny lad-oh!
rhychydwr
17 years ago
"thomas" wrote:

are there in the eria of Shropshire border Wales any Roman or older remains of Quarry's and mines??

and what are the nice place's to look for minerals.

thank you Thomas



I can think of two, but there must be many more:


LLANYMYNECH OGOF NGR SJ 2690 2210 LLANYMYNECH
A 525 feet (main entrance) L 1320 feet VR 75 feet
A Roman copper mine which, despite many articles to the contrary, is entirely man-made in limestone.

Follow the main Oswestry road out of the village of Llanmynech and after 1½ miles turn left at Cross Guns Inn. Follow the signpost to golf links. Park at the end of the road, turn right and walk across the open hill for about 150 yards (watch out for players!).




MAESHAFN CAVE also known as BIG COVERT CAVE LLANFERRES
NGR SJ 1980 6050 A 900 feet L 300 feet Scheduled as an Ancient Monument
A quarter of a mile west of the village of Maeshafn, take the lane leading south past the western edge of the Big Covert. This name is used on the 6th but not the 7th edition of the 1” OS map. It is used by the Forestry Commission on their notices. Fork east through the gate along a grass track, which is followed for 250 yards to just past the brow of a hill. The cave entrance is 15 yards west of the track. This is a natural cave that has been much modified by mining. It has the remains of a wooden gate at the entrance. A descending passage which is 6 feet high and 5 feet wide runs for 115 feet to a fork. The left branch is a natural cave: a low crawl over loose rock for 95 feet leads to a muddy choke. The right branch is a mined passage 4½ feet high which meets a pool of water after 95 feet. All the natural parts of the cave descend steeply at about 20° from the horizontal. It was excavated in 1950 by N E Pritchard who uncovered 6 skeletons and a Romano-British brooch in the shape of a fish. Finds are in the National Museum of Wales, Cardiff.



Cutting coal in my spare time.
Moorebooks
17 years ago


Llanymynech is also a sssi and is thought to be older (possibly bronze age) and not really a place to knock about for minerals. The Golf Club are also very protective about people wandering over the site - do stick to rights of way there are plenty
thomas
  • thomas
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  • Newbie Topic Starter
17 years ago
thank you for this good info.
i can at also 1 roman mine or remain i have found on a map from ordnance Survey: roman britain.

leadmine by Shelve Hill.

ijust don't now or there are still remains

gr. Thomas

p.s.
thank you for the hind am not planning to take minerals from mines just from working quarry's if admit by the owner.
there am also a caver a respect natual beauty.

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