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| A section through the trench at the Sheldon archaeological dig |
At the end of the Sheffield U3A Geology Group field trip to Cressbrook Dale, a few of us headed off to Sheldon, where an archaeological dig by students at Sheffield University and other volunteers - initially undertaken in 2022 and 2023 - was coming to an end.
My friend Catherine, who I had helped with the Bolsterstone Graveyard Project, an event with the Bolsterstone Archaeology and Heritage Group and the preparation of a field trip to Sheffield General Cemetery, is an active member of various archaeological groups and she wanted some advice on an unusual type of stone, which had been encountered in one of the trenches that that had been dug to investigate a circular ditch feature.
Before our field trip, I had looked at the 1:50,000 scale British Geological Survey (BGS) map and this showed that the trenches had been dug into the upper part of the Monsal Dale Limestone Formation (MDLF), with lead rakes in the immediate vicinity.
Approaching the site, which was due to be restored in the immediate future, I noted a pile of turf and two large piles of subsoil that – according to the methodology cited in the report – was removed using a tracked machine with a toothless bucket and then by hand, down to the bedrock.
I have never participated in an archaeological dig and have no knowledge of the techniques used to uncover and record the various layers, but my first view of the trench reminded me of the limestone pavement that I first seen at Malham Cove 40 years earlier and at Co. Clare, when surveying County Geological Sites with the Geological Survey of Ireland.
These examples of karst topography exhibit clints and grykes with a rectangular pattern of jointing, but the limestone here shows no obvious jointing and has been brecciated. This is a common feature of limestone in the vicinity of lead rakes, where the mineral veins occupy fissures that were initiated as joints and faults during the Variscan orogeny.
As a geologist, I would have liked to have had the time to take a close look at the soil profile that had been exposed but, being aware that at 4 o’clock in the afternoon everyone wanted to go home, I just took a few general record photos of the trench - in which it appears that there is a post hole according to Tim Cockrell, the archaeologist in charge of the dig.
It was immediately obvious to me that the limestone was overlain by a thin layer of rock that was completely different – in terms of colour, texture, grain size and the pattern of jointing - and I collected loose specimens of each.
The specimen of limestone, which has a very light brown weathered surface, reveals a very fine grained dark grey fresh surface when broken open with some effort and, except for a fragment of a brachiopod shell, contains no fossils. The fresh surface has a siliceous appearance and the MDLF does contain substantial amounts of chert but, when tested with a drop of hydrochloric acid, it effervesces vigorously.
The overlying layer has weathered to a brown colour and, when in situ, it has a pattern of very small fractures/joints at approximate right angles to each other, which is quite unlike anything that I had seen before. Examining a few roughly cuboid pieces, which are considerably less dense than the limestone, they are extremely fine grained, do not react to hydrochloric acid and can be easily scratched with a finger nail to produce a very light grey/pink powder.
When undertaking a survey of the RIGS (Regionally Important Geological Sites) in the Peak District National Park back in 1995/1996, I encountered a wide variety of rocks and minerals and I came to the conclusion that this might be a bed of weathered volcanic ash. These clay wayboards are rich in bentonite and, according to the BGS description of the Carboniferous Limestone Supergroup, often overlie palaeokarst surfaces.
At the Hartington Station Quarry, the Temple Mine at Matlock Bath and on the High Peak Trail, exposures of these are weathered to a clay that is easily crumbled in the fingers and, although a chemical analysis would be needed to confirm its composition, a section through the nearby Magpie Mine produced by Noel Worley (1980) – provided by the Peak District Mining Museum – shows that clay wayboards do occur in this area.
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| The section of the Magpie Mine by Noel Worley |
















































