Lead Mining, Conservation and Heritage: Shaping a Mountain in Northeast Wales

This article discusses the shaping of Halkyn Mountain, an upland common in the county of Flintshire in northeast Wales. Extractive industry has had a dramatic impact on the area, and it was one of Britain’s major lead mining regions in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. This extractive hi...

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Main Author: Mark Nuttall
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2020-07-01
Series:Humanities
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2076-0787/9/3/70
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spelling doaj-7a73bd69e1294a9a97263e6d01528a8a2020-11-25T03:48:25ZengMDPI AGHumanities2076-07872020-07-019707010.3390/h9030070Lead Mining, Conservation and Heritage: Shaping a Mountain in Northeast WalesMark Nuttall0Department of Anthropology, University of Alberta, Edmonton, AB T6H 2H4, CanadaThis article discusses the shaping of Halkyn Mountain, an upland common in the county of Flintshire in northeast Wales. Extractive industry has had a dramatic impact on the area, and it was one of Britain’s major lead mining regions in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. This extractive history is essential for understanding its contemporary character and is a key element of community identity and local heritage production. The mountain is a multilayered landscape that has been made and transformed by geomorphological and human action, by subterranean water flow, digging, burrowing and extraction, by internal rupture and the upheaval and movement of earth and rock, and by grazing, burning, clearing and churning up the surface. It continues to be shaped by management and conservation, by the lifeworlds of plants and animals, and by perspectives on what constitutes a landscape. Drawing from current anthropological research in Flintshire on the making and shaping of place, the article explores how Halkyn Mountain exemplifies the contested nature—and the contradictions and provocations—of landscape and the difficulties inherent in using, living on, defining and managing a place that has been reshaped by industry, but one that is continually coming into being. It does so through a consideration of the area as a landscape shaped and given form by lead mining, by multispecies encounters, by land management and conservation initiatives, and by how notions of heritage inform local identity and regional preservation.https://www.mdpi.com/2076-0787/9/3/70lead miningconservationheritageWalespost-industrial landscapesinterspecies encounters
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mark Nuttall
spellingShingle Mark Nuttall
Lead Mining, Conservation and Heritage: Shaping a Mountain in Northeast Wales
Humanities
lead mining
conservation
heritage
Wales
post-industrial landscapes
interspecies encounters
author_facet Mark Nuttall
author_sort Mark Nuttall
title Lead Mining, Conservation and Heritage: Shaping a Mountain in Northeast Wales
title_short Lead Mining, Conservation and Heritage: Shaping a Mountain in Northeast Wales
title_full Lead Mining, Conservation and Heritage: Shaping a Mountain in Northeast Wales
title_fullStr Lead Mining, Conservation and Heritage: Shaping a Mountain in Northeast Wales
title_full_unstemmed Lead Mining, Conservation and Heritage: Shaping a Mountain in Northeast Wales
title_sort lead mining, conservation and heritage: shaping a mountain in northeast wales
publisher MDPI AG
series Humanities
issn 2076-0787
publishDate 2020-07-01
description This article discusses the shaping of Halkyn Mountain, an upland common in the county of Flintshire in northeast Wales. Extractive industry has had a dramatic impact on the area, and it was one of Britain’s major lead mining regions in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. This extractive history is essential for understanding its contemporary character and is a key element of community identity and local heritage production. The mountain is a multilayered landscape that has been made and transformed by geomorphological and human action, by subterranean water flow, digging, burrowing and extraction, by internal rupture and the upheaval and movement of earth and rock, and by grazing, burning, clearing and churning up the surface. It continues to be shaped by management and conservation, by the lifeworlds of plants and animals, and by perspectives on what constitutes a landscape. Drawing from current anthropological research in Flintshire on the making and shaping of place, the article explores how Halkyn Mountain exemplifies the contested nature—and the contradictions and provocations—of landscape and the difficulties inherent in using, living on, defining and managing a place that has been reshaped by industry, but one that is continually coming into being. It does so through a consideration of the area as a landscape shaped and given form by lead mining, by multispecies encounters, by land management and conservation initiatives, and by how notions of heritage inform local identity and regional preservation.
topic lead mining
conservation
heritage
Wales
post-industrial landscapes
interspecies encounters
url https://www.mdpi.com/2076-0787/9/3/70
work_keys_str_mv AT marknuttall leadminingconservationandheritageshapingamountaininnortheastwales
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