button to main menu  Otley's Guide 1823 (8th edn 1849)

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Page 151:-
which operates most powerfully on parts least exposed to the weather.
Most of the rocks of this division effervesce in some degree with acids, but more especially those possessing the slaty structure. They are not very productive of metallic ores, although they afford a considerable variety. A vein of lead ore has for some years been profitably worked at Greenside, in Patterdale; copper has formerly been got at Dalehead, in Newlands, which is near the northern boundary of the division - it consists of grey and purple copper, with specimens of malachite. A mine at Coniston, near the southern boundary, has been for several years extensively worked; it produces the yellow sulphuret; and a vein of the same was a few years ago opened at Wythburn. Small veins of iron ore are frequently met with, but scarcely thought worth notice. The famous plumbago, or black-lead mine of Borrowdale, is also situated in this division: but no organic remains have been discovered in it; and if Mr. John Ruthven, the indefatigable fossil hunter, and intelligent curator of the Kendal Natural History museum, has found any in the preceding, it has been of very rare occurrence.
The THIRD division, or Silurian group - forming only inferior elevations - commences with a bed of dark-blue transition limestone, containing here and there a few shells and madrepores, and alternating with a slaty rock of the same colour; the different layers of each being in some places several feet, in others only a few inches in thickness. This limestone crosses the river Duddon near Broughton; passing Broughton Mills, it runs in a north-east direction through Torver, by the foot of the Old Man mountain, and appears near Low Yewdale and
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