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Report - - Welsh Gold Mines 3 - Cambrian, Garthgell, and East Clogau (Wales, 2022-2023) | Mines and Quarries | 28DaysLater.co.uk

Report - Welsh Gold Mines 3 - Cambrian, Garthgell, and East Clogau (Wales, 2022-2023)

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urbanchemist

28DL Regular User
Regular User
The first post in this series was about Clogau gold mine - this one covers the valley between Clogau and Foel Ispri, the next hill along, with the red dots being mine entrances.


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Mineralised veins in this region run roughly east-west, so once gold was discovered in the waste from copper mines on Clogau, any quartz outcrop further east was investigated in the hope of finding more.

The result is numerous holes both in the valley and on Foel Ispri.
Although some gold was found, there was too little to make these mines viable with the technology of the time and many of the excavations don’t extend very far.

This report is the product of several walks, phone for above ground and increasingly battered camera for below.
About a third of the underground bits have been left out as they were not particularly interesting, or in some cases, gated.



Cambrian. For simplicity I’m calling anything on Foel Ispri east of the river the Cambrian mine after the last company to work this area (the rest of the levels on Foel Ispri will be covered in a future post).
Some of the excavations here may previously have been named after local places (Taicynhaeaf or Maestryfer).

It was originally opened for lead in the 1850s with sporadic attempts to extract gold until 1905.
Like most mines it apparently had its own mill, but it’s not shown on maps and I didn’t find anything that looked like mill remains on this part of the hill.

A low level tunnel, also not on maps, was begun to drain the higher workings and I did find a likely candidate for this, right next to the road.
It starts with a well-built portal and goes all of 20 yards - the entrance is visible above and to the left of the metal gate.




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Uphill is a level (adit/tunnel) which went in a satisfactory distance to worked-out area but didn’t extend much further.



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Further up are some run-in levels, and a shaft with a pile of pinkish quartz speckled with pyrites nearby.



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About half way down to the river are some flooded shafts, a run-in level and an open one, which didn’t extend far.



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Right down on the river at the bottom of a gorge are a couple more levels.
The first has a double entrance and stops almost immediately in what was either a shaft or an open stope, now full of waste rock.
There’s a corresponding, but much shorter excavation on the other side of the river.




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Nearby is another level which was more interesting, barreling in a fair distance.



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Up and over a roof-fall leads to a flooded area where the ‘floor’ has gone - hard to see how much further this went from where I was standing.



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Immediately upstream is a channel with an opening at the front - this might have been a wheel pit, or just some sluicing device - I can find no mention of a mill here.



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Further upstream is another level heading east.



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It leads to a shaft coming out behind someone’s house.



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Beyond here it’s time to walk the plank…



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…looking back before it eventually fizzles out.



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continued
 

urbanchemist

28DL Regular User
Regular User
Garthgell. This is on the west bank of the river, and operated over a similar period to the Cambrian mine.
As for Cambrian, most of what was found here was lead and zinc, and not much gold.

Starting with the remains of a mill down by the river (black dot), this was built in the 1860s and was powered first by a water wheel then by a water turbine - a steam engine is also mentioned.
Like most mills it was erected on a slope with one stage feeding the next below.
All that’s left now are terraced remains, a wheel pit and some buddles.




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There are five or six of these circular, slightly convex buddles in an irregular line on a level area above the river.


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Buddles were used for fractionating lead/zinc ores - the crude material was ground to the consistency of sand and poured as a slurry into the center.
Rotating brushes agitated the slurry against a flow of water such that heavier lead-rich material was left near the top, and lighter waste washed down to the sides.
This is a reconstructed example at Minera.



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Buddles weren’t used for gold, which was recovered by washing the slurry over traps (cloths or animal hides) or by various types of amalgamation device - typically involving grinding in the presence of mercury or running over mercury-coated copper plates.
The main problems for the mines in this area seems to have been very fine gold particles which couldn’t be trapped efficiently, and the lead/zinc/iron sulphides which made amalgamation inefficient.

Further up is a pipe which heads in the direction of the mill, filled by an open channel with a sluice at the top.
The channel is unusual because one side is lined with upwardly projecting curved pipes - no idea what these were for.



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One of the levels near the mill which has a collapsing entrance but goes quite a long way.


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Further up in the woods are more levels and shafts - this is one which was gated but not locked, with a largish pile of waste quartz at the entrance.


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Out in the open is another level which soon reaches daylight - it looks like some copper was found here.


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East Clogau or Cae Mab Seifion. Four levels were driven on the other side of the valley to Clogau, hoping to pick up more gold-bearing quartz.
Operating 1862-1902 under several owners the mine was apparently not very productive.
This is the lowest hole which doesn’t go far - the third picture is looking back out from the end.



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The next one up is blocked with an overgrown waste heap suggesting that whatever was pulled out of here didn’t contain much in the way of heavy metals.
The third one with the entrance behind a tree root winds in for a moderate distance.



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The top one seems to have been a trial and doesn’t go more than 20 yards.


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Walking down out of the woods I had lunch outside a ruined barn containing sacks of rotting paperwork, including a large run of The Transactions of the Honourable Society of Cymmrodorion.
Not a publication I’ve come across before, but in amongst the stuff about Welsh Bardic poetry and the like there were some wholesome articles on industrial archeology to read.



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The view from here down the valley, with Cadair Idris on the horizon.


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Plenty more to look at in this region - there are additional excavations in the valley behind Foel Ispri, and further up the main Cwm Mynach valley you start to hit manganese mines.
 
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