Castle Bytham Quarry
Castle Bytham quarry is a disused quarry located close to the centre of the village of Castle Bytham, Lincolnshire, England.[1] It is famous for the exposure of Laeviuscula Zone ammonite fauna has allowed the dating of the Upper Lincolnshire limestone[2] formation to the Bajocian era, and thereby dating other deposits around Europe.[3][4][5]
When the quarry was opened in the 1850s a Bronze Age arrowhead and a Saxon burial were found in the overburden.[5]
Although Ironstone quarrying was common to the west and north, this quarry was worked for Limestone.[3] A kiln adjacent to the railway line was used to produce slaked lime for the agricultural trade and a small amount of cement. The quarry was worked by the Castle Lime company'.[3][6]
The quarry has been left to return to nature since its closure and is now a recognised Site of Special Scientific Interest or SSSI.[4] It has most recently been used as a temporary car park for the annual Castle Bytham Mid-Summer Fair but is otherwise unused. The present owner of the quarry made efforts in 2004 to turn the quarry into an industrial complex of offices and small industrial units.
Thunderbolt Pit, The small quarry to the North of the Little Bytham road, just past the former railway bridge, is in another small outcrop of the same stratification, on the other side of the river.[2] [7] It was not operated by Castle Lime.
References
- grid reference SK990180 Castle Lime quarry
- "BGS map mashup of geological information". - can be zoomed to show the quarries
- "British Geological Survey Lexicon: Upper Lincolnshire Limestone".
- "English Nature description of site" (PDF).
- An Archaeological walk through Castle Bytham (PDF). Heckington: Heritage Trust of Lincolnshire. 2004. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2005-05-14. Retrieved 2011-01-27.
- "Local web site, mentioning the company name". Archived from the original on 2005-09-21.
- grid reference SK997183 Thunderbolt Pit
- Ashton, M. (1980). "The stratigraphy of the Lincolnshire Limestone Formation (Bajocian) in Lincolnshire and Rutland (Leicestershire)". Proceedings of the Geologists' Association. 91: 203–224. doi:10.1016/s0016-7878(80)80040-x.