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Clints(z) Quarry EarthCache

This cache has been archived.

geoawareUK2: The Cumbrian Wildlife Trust do not wish to have caches on this particular reserve and consequently this cache is being archived. A seperate email has been sent to the CO.
GeoawareUK2

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Hidden : 9/11/2009
Difficulty:
1.5 out of 5
Terrain:
2 out of 5

Size: Size:   not chosen (not chosen)

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Geocache Description:


Clints Quarry is located just off the A5086, a short distance North of Egremont. Cars can be parked in a layby just next to the path that leads into the quarry.

Surrounding the central core of the Lake District is a ring of rocks spanning the Carboniferous Period. These include the distinctive Carboniferous Limestone, which forms the limestone scenery of the Kent Estuary area and the Cumbrian part of the Yorkshire Dales area around Kirby Lonsdale.
The landscape of Cumbria, and, in particular, the much loved mountains and valleys of the Lake District, were shaped by the enormous erosive forces of the glaciers and ice sheets of the Ice Ages of the past 500,000 years. Huge amounts of material were deposited by the ice sheets over the landscape leading to the formation of the undulating and hummocky lower-lying ground around the Lakes and the Pennines and resulting in very limited outcrop of the underlying rocks in these areas.
The end of the Variscan mountain-building phase resulted in the formation of a new land surface, on which the deposition of sediments began again in the late Devonian or early Carboniferous (354-290 million years ago) following the encroachment of the early Carboniferous sea. In Northern England and southern Scotland, the land over which the sea transgressed comprised a series of blocks and troughs or basins. Greater thicknesses of sediment were deposited in the troughs than over the blocks which tended to remain as relatively stable, shallower, areas throughout the Carboniferous. Much of Cumbria lay over what was then one of these block areas and this influenced deposition during this period.
Apart from the south-west Cumbrian coast, rocks of Carboniferous age form a broad swathe of outcrop around the older core of the Lake District. The oldest rocks of the area belong to the Carboniferous Limestone Series. These rocks are composed of limestones, sandstones and shales deposited in a shallow marine-estuarine environment. The Carboniferous Limestone is overlain by the Millstone Grit Series. This series consists of a series of limestones, marine shales and sandstones, and the ‘Millstone Grit’ itself, thick coarse-grained sandstones, siltstones and mudstones. These rocks were deposited in the late Carboniferous (approximately 300 million years ago) in a coastal environment where large river deltas were building out into the shallow marine waters. Continuing deposition over the millennia led to the further building out of the deltas and the formation of an extensive low-lying, swampy land area in which the succeeding Coal Measures were deposited.

Clints quarry's name relates to the large angular blocks of Lime stone that can be seen tumbled around the foot of the cliff walls and in the quarry basin, these are known as Clints or Clintz. The quarry is thought to have begun its life in around 1638 as an agricultural lime supply; the lime was used to improve the land around Egremont as the area has thought to have been farmed in one form or another for over 600 years by then. This was only a minor operation until in the 1800's when the Lime stone was mined more industrially to feed, along with the local iron ore, the emerging steel industry.
The operator, from 1909, was the Workington Iron & Steel Company (WI&SC) and prior to then, the old Moss Bay Iron & Steel Company.
The quarry was connected to the Moor Row to Sellafield branch line by a small branch served by Clints sidings signal box, which lay 246 yards south of Woodend Station signal box.
Thousands of tons of furnace stone were delivered by rail to Workington blast furnaces on weekdays and the WI&SC had its own tank engines to service the quarry branch. The Clints quarry, now a nature reserve, closed in 1939.


To claim this earthcache you will need to perform four tasks:
1. Estimate the height of the cliff at N54 29.917 W3 32.007
2. Take photo of cliff and GPSr on nearby rock
3. At N54 29.836 W3 31.944 what colour is the rock, why do you think it is this colour?
4. Finally, the limestone was probably formed under a shallow sea, how many years ago?


Email the answers to the three tasks to me at the same time as you log your find. Post your picture with your log. Any pictures of fossils would be appreciated.


Please Note:- any logs which haven't met the criteria for this earthcache will be deleted.


Additional Hints (Decrypt)

Ovt ubyr va tebhaq

Decryption Key

A|B|C|D|E|F|G|H|I|J|K|L|M
-------------------------
N|O|P|Q|R|S|T|U|V|W|X|Y|Z

(letter above equals below, and vice versa)