The Great Orme Mines in Llandudno boast over 5
miles of explored tunnels and passageways. In 2005 it won the title
of 'The Largest Prehistoric Copper Mines in the World' in the Guinness
World Records. This year marks the 15th anniversary of
the mines being open to the public for everyone to visit and enjoy
this incredible site.
The name Great Orme has old Scandinavian or Norse
origins, ormr meaning snake and hofuth meaning head or
headland. Modern translations take it to mean ‘serpent’s head’,
derived from the appearance of the landmass to those arriving to the
area by sea. The Little Orme lies on the other side of the bay, and
the two land masses surround the modern town of Llandudno. The area
has inspired many artists, poets, and other visitors by its
spectacular beauty and setting.

There are two main phases of mining at the site. The
mine was first worked during the Bronze Age, around 4000 years ago,
about the same time as Stone Henge was being built. The miners used
granite stone hammers brought up from the beach, and animal bone to
dig away at the copper ore. Most of the ore was malachite, a green
mineral used in other parts of the world as eye make-up or paint,
however blue azurite, gold chalcopyrite and even native copper may
have been mined at the site. The site was worked for a period of up
to a thousand years creating a vast array of tunnels, some so small
they could have only been dug out by children around 5 or 6 years
old. The miners used animal fat candles to light their way in
passages that extended for miles and went up to 220 feet below the
surface. Finally mining ceased when they reached the water table,
by this time iron was the new material and the demand for copper
wavered.
After a long hiatus, in which the mine seems almost
forgotten, interest in the mine resumed and water was pumped from
the site during the Industrial Revolution to reach the copper
below. Later Victorian miners sunk shafts down in the site; one can
be seen on the Visitor’s Route that extends 470feet straight down to
sea level. Eventually the mine fell into disuse once again as
Llandudno became known more as a Victorian seaside resort then a
mining town. The mine was covered up by spoil at the end of the 19th
century and forgotten once more.
A scheme to landscape the site in preparation for a car park
prompted cavers and mining engineers to abseil down the 470foot
Vivian’s shaft into the workings below. The mine had always
been thought to have been Roman at its earliest date, but the bone
tools and stone hammers made some locals query this assumption.
Radio-carbon dates were taken off the bone and charcoal found,
placing them as being over 3500 years old. Four local people
set up a company to buy the lease for the site, excavate it and open
it up to the public. The rest you could say is history!
Over 30,000 bones have been discovered from the site belonging to
animals; they range from cows, sheep and pigs to deer, dogs and small
rodents. Some represent food, other bones were used as tools,
some may have been found naturally, others still may have been
ritual deposits. Only two human bones have been found at the
site so far and are on display in the Visitor Centre. People
would have died at the site: it is a dangerous site even for modern
explorers, however victims of fatal accidents would have
been taken out and given the proper burial rite for the time.
There is no evidence that the miners were slaves. Other finds
have included over 3,000 stone hammers, pestle and mortars or other
tools; charcoal from fires lit in the underground; and markings in
bone or the occasional fingerprint left on the tunnel walls.
Victorian miners also left various artefacts that range from clay
pipes to iron shovels, tea pots, horseshoes and a powder horn.
Today the Great Orme Mines are open to visitors from
around February to the end of October 10-5pm. This allows the
public to wander round some of the surface and underground areas of
the site, view some of the artefacts discovered at the site and chat
to the archaeologists and team still working away discovering more
tunnels and secrets of this extraordinary site.
Facts:
Great Orme Mines
Great Orme
Llandudno
North Wales
L30
2XG
Tel: 01492 870447
E-mail:
www.greatorme.freeserve.co.uk
Opening
Times
Feb-Oct 10am-5pm
2006
Prices
Adult £5.00 Children £3.50 Family
(2a+2c) £15.00 Under 5s Free
Guided tours available for booked groups of over 20 people.
© Sian Beecroft,
Archaeologist,
Great Orme
Mines
Useful links:
Accommodation in Llandudno
Heritage Accommodation in Wales
All photographs courtesy of Great
Orme Mines
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