chalk mining
{{Short description|Extracting chalk from deposits by mining}}
File:Happy Jack Chalk Mine 1.jpg]]
File:Quidhampton Chalk Quarry - geograph.org.uk - 291504.jpg, England]]
Chalk mining is the extraction of chalk from underground and above ground deposits by mining.{{cite web|url=http://www.ukgeohazards.info/pages/eng_geol/subsidence_geohazard/eng_geol_subsidence_chalk.htm|title=Subsidence & Collapse Geohazards: Chalk & Flint Mining|accessdate=27 January 2017}} Mined chalk is used mostly to make cement and bricks.
Chalk mining was widespread in Britain in the 19th century because of the large amount of construction underway (and the Industrial Revolution).{{cite web|title=Chalk Mines {{!}} KURG|url=https://www.kurg.org.uk/chalk-mines/|website=www.kurg.org.uk|accessdate=27 January 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170202035728/https://www.kurg.org.uk/chalk-mines/|archive-date=2 February 2017|url-status=dead}} Some chalk mines were extensively large, with passages up to {{convert|25|ft|m}} high and {{convert|15|ft|m}} wide, their passages taking the form of a Norman arch. Because of chalk's softness, picks and shovels were used to excavate tunnels. Stepped slabs were dug into the chalk, allowing many miners to dig at the same time. Care had to be taken to avoid collapse, and places in which the chalk was soft were simply abandoned.
A link was reported in the United Kingdom in 2017 between sinkholes opening up and the location of former chalk mines. The softness of chalk, as well as rain and erosion, has caused the ground in some places to collapse into the remnants of ancient chalk mines and tunnels.{{cite web|title=The sinkhole truth: who's to blame – man or rain?|url=https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/science/10644073/The-sinkhole-truth-whos-to-blame-man-or-rain.html|website=Telegraph.co.uk|accessdate=28 January 2017|language=en}}
See also
References
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{{Portal bar|Earth sciences}}