The calcination of sulphides for arsenic in the Carnon Valley at Bissoe produced similar complaints from farmers. Dying crops bad milk from weak and sickly cattle brought the works up before the courts. From what I remember reading, the wealthy owners of the operations recieved a telling off and very little else. Was it Barton that mentioned this in his Essays in Cornish Mining History?
I must dig them out again, they are a good read.
Mercury production in China also played havoc with the land and the inhabitants.
I will post an article about this written in 1900 and delivered by Frank Trythall of St.Ives Consols, to a meeting of the Cornish Institute of Mining, Mechanical and Metallurgical Engineers in February 1921.
It's as interesting as it is shocking in places, especially when they talk of the miners suffering mump like swellings, salivating and suffering loose teeth as a result.
Nasty!
"You Chinese think of everything!"
"But I''m not Chinese!"
"Then you must have forgotten something!"