Special Mendip habitats

Introduction | Limestone cliffs, crags, caves and screes | Limestone heath | Old lead workings | Ash-lime woodland

Old lead workings

Alpine Pennycress Thlaspi caerulescens, a bioaccumulator which can absorb substantial amounts of lead, cadmium and zinc from the soil. It can be found on lead rich slag heaps around Charterhouse and Priddy.

The spoil heaps produced by the lead mining industry provide a particularly distinctive Mendip habitat. High levels of lead, cadmium and especially zinc are toxic to most plant species, and make growing conditions even more hostile. In addition, the black glassy slag of re-worked lead spoil readily absorbs solar radiation causing extreme temperature variations, and retains few nutrients and little organic matter and water. Furthermore, the steeper slopes of some spoil heaps are intrinsically unstable.

Lead-rich slag from the 19th century mining operations. Blackmoor, Charterhouse.

The vegetation cover of the most contaminated soils tends to be very sparse until some of the toxic elements such as lead and zinc have been removed by metal-tolerant ‘pioneer’ species. A few of these, known as bioaccumulators, absorb high levels of zinc within their tissues, whereas others are metal-tolerant strains of common and widespread species. These metal rich habitats contain spring sandwort, alpine penny-cress, sheep's-fescue, common bent and many small lichens. Once soil toxicity has fallen, other species are able to colonise the spoil heaps, including common sorrel, common bird's-foot-trefoil and early forget-me-not. Old lead workings can be seen in the nature reserves at Priddy Mineries, Blackmoor, Ubley Warren and Velvet Bottom.