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Wren's Hill Road |
At the top of the road, look for the large 'Dudley Bug'
carving on the right. This is a sculpture of a trilobite - Dudley's most
famous fossil. (There's more about fossils on page 4 and 5.)
Under this area are the foundations for the house where
Abraham Darby was born. He was instrumental in the Industrial Revolution
- more about that later.
Turn into the reserve on the right, just past the
Dudley Bug.
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The Snake Pit |
The area just past the entrance is part of a disused
limestone quarry. Limestone is the one of the oldest rock types in the
Midlands. It was laid down here 443 - 417 million years ago in the Silurian
Period. At that time, Dudley was at the bottom of a warm shallow sea.
Imagine what it must have been like where you're standing
- you'd be underwater with soft sand between your toes, the seabed covered
with different types of coral and burrowing creatures. The water around
you is crystal clear as sunlight twinkles down from the surface, picking
out the bright colours of the many strange creatures swimming past.
When the creatures which lived here died, they settled
on the sea bed, leaving layer after layer of dead bodies in the mud. Over
millions of years, under heat and pressure, the mud became limestone with
the dead creatures preserved inside it as fossils.
What
did Dudley look like in the Silurian period? Listen to Graham Worton 禄
How
does a creature turn into a fossil? Listen to Graham Worton 禄
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Layers of rock in the Snake Pit |
If the Earth's crust didn't move, this limestone would
be buried hundreds of metres underground. So why is it sticking up here
on the surface? Over the millions of years since the limestone was created,
the plates of the Earth's crust have been moving about, folding and tilting
the rock as easily as if it were fabric.
If people hadn't quarried the limestone here, they would
never have found fossils and found out about Dudley's incredible past.
Dudley limestone was first used as a building material - Dudley Castle
is made from the local rock (and its walls are full of fossils!). Then,
in the 1600s and 1700s, limestone was burned and sold as quicklime all
over the UK, when it was used as a fertilizer on farms.
After that, the major use of Dudley limestone has been
in the iron industry. All the elements needed for ironworks are available
in the Black Country. Quicklime takes impurities out of coal - this means
the reaction for making iron needs less coal, so it's cheaper.
Why
is the limestone at the surface? Listen to Graham Worton 禄
Why
was limestone mined? Listen to Graham Worton 禄
Go back onto Wren's Hill Road, cross over and go into
the nature reserve. You'll see there is a pathway cut into the hill on
the right...
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