Arbor low, Middleton Moor. (SK162633)
Unusual and attractive brown/orange banded barite of stalactobotryodial
form, locally known as "Oakstone". The barite takes a high polish,
and when skilfully done show 'eyes' formed from small concentric rings of
contrasting coloured material.
Bage mine, Wirksworth. (SK291553)
Bage mine is one of the classic locations in Derbyshire, being the type
locality for matlockite. Phosgenite, locally called cromfordite, was also
found here in the 19th century, although recent exploration has found
neither. Anglesite, galena and barite also occur.
Ball Eye mine and quarry, Via Gellia, Cromford.
Dark blue fluorite, barite, malachite, cerussite and anglesite.
Bonsall Moor.
This upland area to the west of Matlock Baths is riddled with old mine
workings and small quarries. At Moor Farm quarry, worked in the 1980's,
large scalenohedral calcite groups were found and occasionally 'Axe-head'
calcite twins. Cerussite crystals on galena were also quite common from
here.
Calton Hill, Taddington. (SK117715)
Quarrying exposed an outcrop of volcanic rock with many cavities containing
small crystals of amethystine and smoky quartz occasionally in association
with hematite included calcite crystals.
Crich Mines & Quarry
The area produced clear, purple and amber fluorite. Crich Quarry is a
working limestone quarry. Cerussite wulfenite and galena found here too.
Castleton area
World renown for the deposits of banded fluorite called Blue John which
for many centuries has been worked into attractive jewellery and an amazing
variety of decorative objects. Each of the blue john veins in and around
Castleton have a unique and distinctive colour banding which allows specimens
to be provanced to a specific vein. There are 14 in all with names such
as Winnats 1, Cliff blue etc. Extraction of material is now strictly limited
but good examples can be seen in the shops and museums in Castleton village
and in the show caves nearby.
Dirtlow Rake, Castleton (SK150817)
Large opencast, worked for barite and fluorite into the 1990's. The fluorite
can be either clear with pyrite inclusions or small purple cubes associated
with coxscomb barite and scalenohedral calcite. Also found here were unusual
forms of barite either in convoluted tube shaped masses or spiral aggregated
crystals etched out of calcite by collectors.
Ecton copper mines, Staffordshire ( SK 100580)
Strictly the mine is in Staffordshire but it was part of the Duke of Devonshire's
royalties. The richness of the mine in the late eighteenth century paid
for the building of the Crescent at Buxton by the 5th Duke. The mines
are known for azurite, malachite, chalcopyrite, cuprite, sphalerite and
large calcite groups. Smaller mines in the area have produced good secondary
minerals from the tips particularly Waterbank mine (SK102576) where brochantite,
aurichalcite, serpierite, posnjakite, ramsbeckite, namuwite, hydrozincite,
cerussite and smithsonite have been found.
Fall Hill Quarry, Ashover (SK354623)
A relatively small quarry, worked for fluorite in the1970's and 1980's
but now partially flooded. Millerite occurs as filaments in calcite veins
traversing the toadstone. Excellent beds of clear and included fluorite
cubes to 50mm, sphalerite crystals, sometimes with greenockite coatings,
marcasite, hydrocarbons and sharp 'dog tooth' calcite crystals in the
limestone.
Golconda Mine, Brassington (SK249551)
The location for probably the best Derbyshire aurichalcite associated
with beds of white/grey crystallised hemimorphite on barite.
Gregory Mine, Ashover (SK357621)
Old time specimens of galena are some of the best to come out of the UK.
Excellent specimens in Truro museum. Enargite.
Ladywash Mine, Eyam (SK219775)
Sphalerite including red 'ruby' type, Large display specimens of clear
to grey fluorite often pleasingly associated with calcite, Occasionally
wulfenite, marcasite, chalcopyrite and attractive fluorite/barite banded
specimens.
Sallot Hole Mine, Calver (SK222743)
Beds of small purple fluorite cubes and larger clear crystals. Sharp lustrous
calcite crystals occasionally double terminated, marcasite.
Magpie Mine, Sheldon (SK175685)
Large sprays of light brown 'dog-tooth' calcite, sphalerite. The mine
is now a Field Centre, for the Peak District Mines Historical Society.
Masson Hill Quarry (SK286591)
Worked in the 1980's. Galena crystals, cerussite, fluorite, either clear
or amber coloured usually with pyrite inclusions. Grey pseudo-stalactitic
barite.
Millclose Mine, Darley Dale (SK259625)
This was the largest mine in the district producing some half a million
tonnes of galena. Galena, sphalerite with greenockite. Large scalenohedral
calcite groups, with marcasite and fluorite.
Mill Dam Mine, Hucklow (SK177780)
Mill Dam mine was the last mine to work specifically for fluorite in Derbyshire.
Excellent clear calcite crystals, fluorite (clear and dark purple), anglesite
and wulfenite.
Milltown quarry (SK354622)
A disused quarry into which large amounts of industrial slurry have been
dumped. Ashoverite, anglesite, calcite, cerussite, fluorite, galena, hydrocerussite,
palygorskite, smithsonite, sweetite, and weddellite were found here. (see
UK Journal of Mines and Minerals Issue No.10).
Pike Lane mine, Winster (SK233598)
Cerussites, wulfenite. (see UK Journal of Mines and Minerals Issue No.7)
Portway/ Hollandtwine Mine, Castleton (SK140813)
This was worked opencast into the 1990's for barite. Large boulders of
barite which when sawn and polished produce specimens showing attractive
patterns from concentric bands of different coloured barite.
.
Rock Arches Quarry, Bonsall Moor
Typical clear and included fluorite in the limestone. Toadstone outcropped
in the north end of the quarry within which small veins of deep purple
fluorite occurred, reminiscent of the material from Castleton. The toadstone
also produced small specimens of green pyromorphite.
Royal Mine/ Cumberland cavern complex, Matlock Baths
(SK292579)
Provided good collecting in the 1970's before it became part of Gulliver's
Kingdom. Excellent hemimorphite with fluorite, banded aragonite, marcasite,
smithsonite, cerussite and calcite.
Isolation mine, Snelston near Ashbourne. (SK155414)
Azurite, wulfenite and malachite.
Vale Road Quarry, Mansfield Woodhouse. (SK531649)
A working quarry, extracting roadstone from the interbedded dolomatised
limestone and mudstones of Permian age since 1967. Small cavities in the
dolomite contained barite, pyrite, calcite and galena and sphalerite.
Whitwell Quarry, Whitwell
A large quarry on the border with Nottinghamshire, extracting magnesian
limestone of Permian age. Historically little of mineralogical interest
has been found from the magnesian limestone deposits but in the 1980's
significant finds were made from a fault crossing the quarry containing
mixed lead/vanadium mineralisation. Its importance was in the quality
of the vanadium minerals vanadinite and descloizite, probably the best
yet to be found in England and the secondary lead mineral suite including
leadhillite, lanarkite, cerussite, anglesite, pyromorphite, scotlandite,
mattheddleite and possibly susannite. Other minerals found were barite,
calcite, hemimorphite, and sphalerite. A number of mineral specimens have
yet to be identified.
Wapping Mine, Matlock Baths. (SK294575)
An amazing complex of workings which link through to Cumberland Cavern.
Many areas of large dog-tooth calcite, fluorite, cerussite, hemimorphite
and barite in thin blades resembling mica.
White Rake, Great Hucklow (SK165640).
Good cerussite specimens for Derbyshire with anglesite and pyromorphite
in small crystals.
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