Wheal Gorland

Wheal Gorland was a metalliferous mine located just to the north-east of the village of St Day, Cornwall, in England, United Kingdom. It was one of the most important Cornish mines of the late 18th and early 19th centuries, both for the quantity of ore it produced and for the wide variety of uncommon secondary copper minerals found there[1] as a result of supergene enrichment.[2] It is the type locality for the minerals chenevixite, clinoclase, cornwallite, kernowite[3] and liroconite.[4]

Wheal Gorland
Liroconite from Wheal Gorland, its type locality
Location
Wheal Gorland
Location in Cornwall
LocationSt Day
CountyCornwall
CountryEngland
Coordinates50°14′30″N 5°11′02″W
Production
ProductsCopper, tin, arsenic and tungsten
History
Opened1792, 1906
Closed1864, 1909

History

The production of the mine was very inconsistent because of the sporadic distribution of its rich ore-bodies: in 1833 George Abbot wrote[5] that it had made profits of over £300,000, produced 1,400 tons of ore per annum, and ranked third, in terms of profits,[6] just behind Dolcoath mine and Consolidated Mines. However, in 1865 Thomas Spargo wrote[7] "now part of St. Day United; idle".[8]

In the early 1790s Wheal Gorland was connected to the Great County Adit and its own existing shallow adits were adapted to drain into this deeper adit.[1] Records show that between 1815 and 1851 the mine produced 40,750 tons of 7½% copper ore, 15 tons of black tin, and 18 tons of arsenic.[9] Much fluorspar was also produced, and gold was reputedly found in the gossan.[9] In 1852 the mine was taken over by the St. Day United Group of mines and it became the main site for maintenance of the Great County Adit,[1] but by 1864 it had been abandoned.[8]

The mine was reopened in 1906 when Edgar Allen and Company[1] reworked the stopes and the dumps for tin and tungsten ores. It sold 164 tons of tungsten ore and 18 tons of black tin before closing, for the last time, in 1909.[9]

Since 1988 the site has been designated as a Site of Special Scientific Interest because of the variety and quality of lead and copper minerals that have been found in the mine dumps.[10] A condition summary compiled on 21 July 2010 reported that the site was in an ″unfavourable declining condition″ because growth of scrubland vegetation was encroaching on to the waste dumps and hindering future excavations in search of minerals for scientific study. The summary further states that the vegetation on the remaining mine dump may also be affecting the minerals themselves, as formation of new soil horizons could affect chemical processes within the dump.[11]

See also

References

  1. Buckley, J A (2000). The Great County Adit. Pool, Camborne, Cornwall: Penhellick Publications. pp. 55–56. ISBN 1-871678-51-X.
  2. "Camborne School of Mines Virtual Museum - The Cornubian Orefield". University of Exeter. Retrieved 20 June 2009.
  3. "Kernowite: New green mineral discovered in 220-year-old rock". BBC News. 23 December 2020. Retrieved 23 December 2020.
  4. "Wheal Gorland, St Day United Mines (Poldice Mines), Gwennap area, Camborne - Redruth - St Day District, Cornwall, England, UK". mindat.org. Retrieved 20 June 2009.
  5. in: An Essay on the Mines of England: Their Importance as a Source of National Wealth
  6. in a table entitled: Mines which have been continuously productive, and are still working profitably
  7. on page 54 of: The Mines of Cornwall and Devon: Statistics and Observations (online at Google Books)
  8. "The Mines of Gwennap - Wheal Gorland". Cornwall in Focus. Retrieved 20 June 2009.
  9. Dines, H. G. (1956). The Metalliferous Mining Region of South-West England. Volume I. London: HMSO. p. 408.
  10. "Wheal Gorland" (PDF). Natural England. 24 June 1988. Retrieved 29 October 2011.
  11. "SSSI unit information". Natural England. Retrieved 29 October 2011.
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