EileenB
  • EileenB
  • 50.2% (Neutral)
  • Newbie Topic Starter
13 years ago
Having recently moved to St Day, I am keen to research something of the history and the mines which run under our property. It is something about which I know very little but as a keen genealogist, the past fascinates me.

As part of our boundary we have a Cornish hedge which incorporates a very interesting worked granite stone which has been suggested may be a tin mould. We know the property sits on old mine workings and there is an adit just feet from where the mould now rests.

http://www.photoshow.com/watch/mB4ZF4Cb 

AR
  • AR
  • 50.2% (Neutral)
  • Newbie
13 years ago
http://www.moorebooks.co.uk/shelves/cart.php?target=product&product_id=16359&category_id=314 
My copy's at home and I'm at work so I can't compare the ones shown there with your stone.
Follow the horses, Johnny my laddie, follow the horses canny lad-oh!
Tin Miner
13 years ago
Hello Eileen - A very interesting stone indeed. I would say that it is a 'Float Stone' Although, I could be wrong, as I've not seen it in situ - These were placed just outside the furnace in a smelting house to catch and direct the molten tin into a 'Mould Stone' from whence an ingot of tin would be obtained - This is called 'White Tin' and 'Black Tin' is the crushed fine particles of cassiterite that is placed within the furnace along with charcoal, or peat in some cases.
These finds are rare in Devon, and I'm not to familiar with the Cornish artefacts. It might be worth contacting Colin Buck or Adam Sharpe of the Cornwall HES

Kindest regards Tin Miner
spitfire
13 years ago
I'm with Tin Miner on this one, it certainly looks like a float stone.
spitfire

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