It was decades ago when a
local council, going on site to put up a new school on what had been allotments
with sheds, found that the bulldozer had gone down a big hole. This was a mining district where coal had
been taken even in the Middle Ages.
Monks from the local
monastery, or perhaps lay employees or tenants had extracted coal from shallow
bell shaped pits. Then there were no
tunnels etc. just Bell pits dotted about all over the place, without much logic
and long forgotten. They had been capped
at some time in the past.
As well as these there
were the remains of other workings, both for coal and other minerals where
found. Again these were from another age
and there were no records of them. The
more extensive of these had an added problem because like modern mines a movement of rock etc. could be transmitted along any fault line.
Our ancestors had been
very busy underground mining and digging for many reasons all over the
place. I recall reading Harmsworth
Magazines at Grandma's from the 1890's with articles about the long established
salt mines of Cheshire causing local towns to become lop sided.
All these and nature too
have endowed us with potential problems for now and the future and any of the
shifts of activity or other causes can give us a nasty surprise or shock. Such as instead of fairies at the bottom of
the garden a cavern opens up and the car insurance does not cover it.
The closure of the M2
because of a big hole, luckily in the central reservation, is said to be a Dene
Hole, not a Sink Hole. The Vikings are
blamed for it, because they were as busy as any others in digging for
materials.
So you never know. Add to this the matter of the water
table. In many urban areas at one time
industry and related activities took out a great deal of the underground water.
As this industry has
declined in many places the water table has been reinstating itself. The effects of this could be interesting and
unpredictable. Be careful of basement
flats or storing the family treasure in one.
Depending on what is
underneath, how it relates to other strata and the geology there is a great
deal of potential for events and issues in many place. Whether the insurance industry or government
can make some sensible arrangements or cover is a real question, is it a Euro
responsibility?
As we build more, reshape
more and redirect nature more there are going to be a lot more issues, events
and unexpected happenings. Don't bet on
it, you may be on a loser.
Shipley Hall in Derbyshire was built on the proceeds of coal mining but ironically had to be demolished in 1943 because of subsidence.
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