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NATURAL ENGLAND SSSI CERTIFICATE OF RECOGNITION

certificate of recognition.png On behalf of the Derbyshire Caving Association conservation team I would like to thank all those cavers who helped out with the Peak District SSSI Cave Conservation Monitoring Scheme over the last couple of years. In recognition of the observations you made during your caving exploits and the forms you helped fill in and update, Natural England the statutory body responsible for protecting SSSIs in England under the Wildlife and Countryside Act 1981, have awarded you with a ‘Certificate of Recognition !’ (1.3Mb.)

We hope that you will able to continue to help Natural England and their legal duty in ensuring each of our SSSI caves remain in ‘good and favourable condition’.

For more details, maps and information on the Peak District’s caves of Site of Special Scientific Interest please see elsewhere on this web site.

Thanks! Christine Wilson.DCA Assistant Conservation Officer on behalf of Dave Webb DCA Conservation Officer.


Natural England update on the research at Water Icicle Close Cavern in Lathkill Dale (SSSI)

This is an update on the current research being undertaken at Water Icicle Close Cavern (WICC) in the new passage extensions and an assessment of current access arrangements.

It is a legal duty under the Wildlife & Countryside Act 1981 (as amended) that Natural England ensures that these new and important scientific findings, located within a statutory site (Site of Special Scientific Interest or SSSI) are maintained, available for study and in good condition. This is the reason the current access arrangements were put in place by Orpheus Caving Club (OCC) after the initial discovery.

The discovery of this new passage in the Water Icicle System should not be underestimated in its importance both nationally and possibly internationally. This information is intended to give you a greater understanding of the need to protect such an important environment.

OCC have organised an effective leadership system which safeguards important features within this new section of the cave and this is working well to maintain and conserve these fragile features, whilst research is being carried out. The features are only in such pristine condition as a result of the immediate implementation of conservation measures by the explorers. The most recent visit by scientists was on 29 January 2011 and all parties were extremely impressed by its new features and how well they had been protected.

Importance of the discovered features

Water Icicle Cave is a natural cave that lies more than 80 metres above the present day river system. Its presence, together with small high level caves on the flanks of Lathkill Dale, suggests that there was once an extensive network of high level phreatic caves of which little is known. The age of these caves is uncertain but the recent discovery suggests that the system in WICC drained over a million years ago and may even be pre-Quaternary (greater than 2.6 million years old). A substantial stream has brought in clastic (rock fragment) sediment deposits the source of which is unknown as there are no stream-sinks within several kilometres of the cave.

The original part of the cave was designated as a SSSI for the shape and development of the passages (passage morphology), its important stalactite/stalagmite/flowstone deposits (speleothems) and sediment deposits. The newly discovered section of cave remains within the designated SSSI boundary

The sediment deposits found in the new passages are not only fascinating but the fact that they are so unaffected by human activity gives us the opportunity to study their origins. Initial examination of clasts within the deposits suggests they contain rocks that are not normally found in the Peak District. Various samples of material were collected on 29 January 2011 and work is in progress to determine their origins and whether they were transported to the Peak District by water, air or ice.

A sample was also collected of the flowstone over the top of the sediment and this is being prepared for uranium-series dating to determine its age. The sediment beneath this cap is even older.

The new passages contain broken speloethem material which is suggestive of at least one tectonic (earthquake-like) event, so studying these samples may enable us to date such episodes. Again, samples have been removed and are being prepared for uranium-series dating.

The interrelationship of the flowstone & sediment deposits will help reveal the story of geological events not only in the cave itself but also in the wider context of cave development in Derbyshire.

In addition to the deposits described above an unusual clast was found to be embedded in the limestone which appeared to be of volcanic origin, possibly a basalt bomb. As the nearest known volcanic activity occurred at Calton Hill above Chelmorton, a distance of approximately five miles away from WICC, samples of this clast were also taken for microscopic analysis. The implications, should the analysis prove positive and bearing in mind that thirty metres of limestone have been deposited on top of it, are of considerable significance in the understanding of the area’s geological past.

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Welcome to the Peak District SSSI Cave Conservation Monitoring Scheme’s own website.
map The Site.

This site has been set up to facilitate communication between Natural England (formerly English Nature) and Peak District Cavers on the administration of the Scheme, and to enable cavers to have access to the most up to date version of the Monitoring Forms and surveys that are available for cave sites within our seven geological (Cave) SSSIs.  It is hoped that the site will further serve to publicise the Scheme and highlight the importance of maintaining up to date records on the condition of our scheduled caves and mines.

Here you can find:-

Cave surveys highlighting areas of particular interest in each cave from a scientific and conservation point of view.

Cave Monitoring Forms for cavers to complete to let us know of the condition of and any changes to the features highlighted on the surveys. (Whether good or bad.)

Any queries relating to any of the Cave Forms or other issues relating to the Peak District SSSI Cave Conservation Monitoring Scheme please contact:

Natural England
Jo Poll - SSSI Cave Monitoring Project Officer.
Peak to Trent Team,
Endcliffe, Deepdale Business Park,
Ashford Road, Bakewell,
Derbyshire, DE46 1GT.
Tel: 0300 060 1781
E-mail:

DCA (The Derbyshire Caving Association)
Dave Webb – DCA Conservation Officer
Tel: 0115 8401109
E-mail:

If you have any queries about or suggestions for the web site, please contact:

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