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Clive's
Mine
For information contact Dan
Hibberts
Report by John
Taylor - August 2000
Excavation of a shaft at Back o' th' Brook Farm, Waterfall, began in
May 1998 when Alan Rowlinson and Dan Hibberts of the Eldon Pothole Club
managed to persuade the owner to let them loose with his JCB.
The lead looked promising with 2.7m deep, 1.5M diameter ginging around
the top of the shaft and for three weeks the boys spent almost every
evening at the dig.
When the shaft became too deep for the excavator they used a hand winch
and a milk-churn kibble to haul out the years of debris. Holes in the
ground can and often do get filled with the most unsavoury rubbish and
this shaft was no exception, It was soon named Texal Shaft, Texal being
a breed of sheep, which suggests how grim the digging must have been
Mike Salt also of the EPC joined them on occasion but not being of
farmers stock, he found the digging nauseating, to this day he curses
the place. On one such occasion, about three weeks into the project,
Mike had spent ten minutes digging when, much to the chagrin of Allen
and Dan, he broke into a cavity ten metres down the shaft. From there a
mined level was explored and yielded 20m of part mined, part natural,
passage.
This discovery spurred the team on and after a couple of months the
bottom of the shaft began to bell out at around minus sixteen metres.
In the bottom of the shaft a small passage led to a natural chamber
almost totally filled with debris while three metres from the bottom a
series of part natural, part mined passages ran upwards at an
inclination of around forty degrees.
Two hundred meters to the south and thirty five meters lower than Texal
Shaft is a wet weather resurgance that is reputed, in flood, to push
out a half meter high pillar of water. Local legend tells of a mine
entrance in this area that once produced a flood powerful enough to
sweep away the surrounding dry-stone walls. Suspecting that the water
may come from an old sough driven to drain the mines higher up, Dan and
All investigated the site in July 1999. They reached a depth of around
six meters, until the arm of the JCB could make no further progress,
but found neither cave nor sough.
Interest waned for a year until three months ago when work was resumed
and the chamber below the shaft was excavated further. The debris in
the floor of this chamber now slopes away to a depth of around five
metres.
We have recently surveyed seventy meters of passage in the mine and
estimate that, at present, there is around another twenty. Digging
continues.
The farmer wishes access to the mine to be controlled. Interested
parties should contact
Dan
Hibberts.
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