Wenvoe Quarry is an operational quarry located on the eastern edge of the Vale of Glamorgan, south Wales, approximately 5 km (3 miles) southwest of Cardiff city centre. It is situated on Alps Quarry Road, in an area known as "The Alps", between Wenvoe, Culverhouse Cross and Caerau. The quarry is accessed from the A4050 road.

Looking towards Wenvoe Quarry (beyond the trees)

The quarry extracts limestone rock, from which a variety of construction aggregates are produced.

Wenvoe Quarry was developed from the Alps Quarry. The now-closed Whitehall Quarry, located 1 km (0.6 miles) to the west, was also known as Wenvoe Quarry.

Current operation edit

Wenvoe Quarry is operated by Breedon Group, and the mineral rights are owned by the Wenvoe Castle Estate. The quarry is bounded on all sides by agricultural fields and dense woodland. The extraction area is not visible from public rights of way.

The quarry is divided into two operational areas, which are connected by a tunnel. The current extraction area is at the eastern margin of the site. Historical quarry workings at the western margin of the site are now used for processing rock and for stockpiling aggregates.

As with most quarries that produce construction aggregates, the rock is blasted with explosives to fragment it. The blasted rock is loaded by excavators onto off-road haul trucks and transported to an area where it is crushed and screened to produce construction aggregates of various sizes and properties.

Geology and terrain edit

The quarry extracts carboniferous limestone from the Friar's Point Limestone formation, which lies towards the upper boundary of the Black Rock Limestone Subgroup, itself a constituent of the Pembroke Limestone Group. The Friar's Point Limestone formation was deposited between 358.9 and 344.5 million years ago. The quarry works a portion of the formation that occurs at the surface as an inlier, surrounded by the younger rocks of the Mercia Mudstone Group. The eastern edge of the inlier is bounded by the Penarth Fault.[1]

The limestone formation at the quarry is around 265 m thick and has a dip of approximately 30° to the horizontal, towards the west. As a result of the limestone's relative durability compared to the Mercia Mudstone Group, together with the dip of the formation to the west and the sharp boundary against the Penarth Fault to the east, the limestone is expressed as a prominent ridge which runs roughly north-northwest to south-southeast and stands proud of the surrounding terrain by up to 60 m. The eastern boundary of the limestone forms a moderately steep escarpment. Within the quarry boundary, the limestone is covered by as little as 5 cm of soil.

Water running off the ridge drains to the Bullcroft Brook to the east and to the headwaters of the Wrinstone Brook to the west. The two brooks combine downstream to form the Cadoxton River, which discharges to the Bristol Channel at The Bendricks near Barry.

History of quarrying edit

An Ordnance Survey map that was surveyed in 1878–79[2] shows small quarry workings and a lime kiln alongside what became known as Alps Quarry Road. Commercial-scale operations at the quarry started in the 1880s to supply the building of Barry Docks, and in 1889 the quarry employed some 200 men.[3]

An 1898 Ordnance Survey map revision[4] shows the quarry workings had significantly expanded, with multiple tramways within the quarry. Stone was conveyed down an inclined tramway to be loaded onto wagons on the Barry Railway close to the southern entrance of the Wenvoe Tunnel. Waste rock was deposited on land on several sides of the quarry.

A revised Ordnance Survey map of 1915[5] records "Alps Quarry (disused)".

Commercial quarrying resumed in 1976, with the development of what is now the current extraction area. Quarrying operations have been continuous since then, under various operating companies.

1889 accident edit

At around midday on 15 August 1889 three men, Charles Harding, George Richards and James Wills, were killed while boring a hole for blasting purposes, about 10 feet (3 m) from the face of the quarry. Large boulders fell on them and they fell to the bottom of the quarry, some 60 feet (18 m) below, and were crushed, two of them beyond recognition. Harding was rescued alive, but died about an hour later from a fractured skull and complications shortly before arriving in hospital.[3]

Nearby features edit

Coed-y-Cymdda was an archaeological site that was excavated prior to its destruction by quarrying operations in 1978–1980. It was an earthwork hill-slope enclosure dating from the late Bronze Age, located on the southwest-facing flank of the ridge that now hosts the Wenvoe Quarry. Archaeological finds indicated activity on the site until the Roman period.[6]

A pair of lime kilns, presumably those recorded in the Ordnance Survey map of 1885, are located adjacent to the quarry entrance. The kiln draw arches were re-faced and incorporated into the wall of the quarry, although the chambers have partially collapsed.

The Wenvoe Iron Ore Mine[7] was a small mining operation located on the northeast flank of the ridge, facing the Cwrt-yr-Ala road. The operation mined haematite intermittently in the mid to late 1800s, by both surface (opencast) and underground workings, the latter accessed by several levels. An inclined mineral tramway accessed the surface workings high on the ridge. In 1979, as quarrying progressed, the Alps Quarry broke into the underground iron ore workings. Few remains of the mine are visible today.

The main line of the Barry Railway opened in 1889, running from Trehafod in the Rhondda valley to Barry. It was chiefly a mineral railway, carrying large volumes of coal to be shipped from Barry Docks, although it also carried sparse passenger services. There was a station at Wenvoe. The main line ran for part of its length through the Wenvoe Tunnel, which had its southern portal approximately 250 m southwest of the present quarry entrance. The line was closed in 1963 but the tunnel and southern portal survive.

References edit

  1. ^ Waters, R. A. and Lawrence, D. J. D. 1987. Geology of the South Wales Coalfield, Part III, the country around Cardiff. 3rd edition. Mem. Br. Geol. Surv. , Sheet 263 (England and Wales).
  2. ^ Ordnance Survey six-inch map of England and Wales, Glamorgan Sheet XLVII. Surveyed 1878 to 1879, published 1885. National Library of Scotland https://maps.nls.uk/view/102342664#zoom=4&lat=8773&lon=2323&layers=BT. Retrieved 4 June 2023.
  3. ^ a b Western Mail - Friday 16 August 1889, p.3, Accessed via The British Newspaper Archive (subscription required). Retrieved 19 November 2014.
  4. ^ Ordnance Survey six-inch map of England and Wales, Glamorgan Sheet XLVII.NW. Revised 1898, published 1901. National Library of Scotland https://maps.nls.uk/view/102183909#zoom=5&lat=4164&lon=1933&layers=BT. Retrieved 4 June 2023.
  5. ^ Ordnance Survey six-inch map of England and Wales, Glamorgan Sheet XLVII. Revised 1915, published 1922. National Library of Scotland https://maps.nls.uk/view/102342661#zoom=6&lat=8937&lon=1688&layers=BT. Retrieved 4 June 2023.
  6. ^ Wiles, John (16 March 2007). "Coed-y-cymdda Earthwork Enclosure". Coflein. Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Wales. Retrieved 24 April 2017.
  7. ^ "Wenvoe Iron Mine, Wenvoe, Vale of Glamorgan, Wales, UK". Mindat.org. Retrieved 11 June 2023.

51°27′32″N 3°14′53″W / 51.459°N 3.248°W / 51.459; -3.248