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Botallack Mine

Botallack Mine
Crowns engine houses, Botallack.jpg
Engine houses at Crown Mines
Type industrial heritage, mine
Coordinates 50°8′24″N 5°41′27″W / 50.14000°N 5.69083°W / 50.14000; -5.69083Coordinates: 50°8′24″N 5°41′27″W / 50.14000°N 5.69083°W / 50.14000; -5.69083
Owner National Trust
Type Cultural
Criteria ii, iii, iv
Designated 2006 (30th session)
Part of Cornwall and West Devon Mining Landscape
Reference no. 1215
United Kingdom Europe and North America
Listed Building – Grade II
Botallack Mine is located in Cornwall
Botallack Mine
Location of Botallack Mine in Cornwall

The Botallack Mine (Cornish: Bostalek) is a former mine in Botallack in the west of Cornwall, England, UK. Since 2006 it has been part of the UNESCO World Heritage Site – Cornwall and West Devon Mining Landscape. The mine is within the Aire Point to Carrick Du Site of Special Scientific Interest (SSSI) and the South West Coast Path passes through the cove.

The village of Botallack is on the B3306 road, in a former tin and copper mining area situated between the town of St Just in Penwith and the village of Pendeen.

It is unclear how far back mining activity goes in this location. Early records date from the 1500s. Some archaeological evidence points to mining here in the Roman era or even as far back as the Bronze Age.

Botallack was a submarine mine, with tunnels extending under the sea, in places for half a mile. Over its recorded lifetime, the mine produced around 14,500 tonnes of tin, 20,000 tonnes of copper and 1,500 tonnes of arsenic. An estimated 1.5 million tonnes of waste would have been dug up with the minerals. In the 1860s a new diagonal shaft was dug. In 1865, the Prince and Princess of Wales visited and descended down the shaft, creating a mini-boom in tourism that caused the mine operators to charge visitors a guinea per person. The mine closed in 1895 as a result of falling tin and copper prices. The mining developments around Botallack form part of the St Just mining district's successful inclusion in the Cornwall and West Devon Mining Landscape World Heritage site which was inscribed in July 2006.


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