Tuesday 3 January 2012

Article- A new look at world below city's streets (Nottingham)

Underneath the busy streets of Nottingham lies a warren of caves. Now, a unique project has brought long-forgotten caves into the public eye. Delia Monk reports...

STATUES, medieval symbols and even underground heating systems are just some of the things that have been seen in Nottingham's caves this year.
  1. Expert:   Dr David Strange-Walker of Trent and Peak Archaeology by some of the caves at Rock Cemetery, in Mansfield Road, just one of many city caves where he and his team have used cutting-edge technology to create a 3D survey.
Expert: Dr David Strange-Walker of Trent and Peak Archaeology by some of the caves at Rock Cemetery, in Mansfield Road, just one of many city caves where he and his team have used cutting-edge technology to create a 3D survey.
  1. Wonders:   A full-size sandstone statue of a goddess figure in Thomas Herbert's Columns Cave. Far left: Medieval carved crosses in the malting cave beneath Broadway, in the Lace Market.
Wonders: A full-size sandstone statue of a goddess figure in Thomas Herbert's Columns Cave. Far left: Medieval carved crosses in the malting cave beneath Broadway, in the Lace Market.
  1. Sand caves:   A laser-  scanned silhouette image of the caves in the Rock Cemetery, in Mansfield Road. The  cemetery was an underground sand mine in the 19th century.
Sand caves: A laser- scanned silhouette image of the caves in the Rock Cemetery, in Mansfield Road. The cemetery was an underground sand mine in the 19th century.
  1. http://www.thisisnottingham.co.uk/images/localpeople/ugc-images/275790/Article/images/14302665/3445591.png
  2. http://www.thisisnottingham.co.uk/images/localpeople/ugc-images/275790/Article/images/14302665/3445547.png
  3. http://www.thisisnottingham.co.uk/images/localpeople/ugc-images/275790/Article/images/14302665/3445592.png
The Nottingham Caves Survey, which started in February 2010, has now recorded and documented more than 70 caves in the city.

Many are private, belonging to the owners of the properties that sit above them, and have not been entered by anyone else for decades.

These are just some of the pictures of the discoveries to date, ahead of the project finishing in February. By then, Trent and Peak Archaeology, which is running the project and is part of York Archaeological Trust, will have entered and surveyed about 90 of Nottingham's 500-strong caves.

It has also released YouTube videos that have attracted more than 165,000 hits from 27 countries.

But project manager Dr David Strange-Walker hopes that the team may be able to extend their English Heritage funding for one year in a bid to enter as many of the caves as possible.

If successful, they would widen it into a community project and train local volunteers to try and record as much as they can.

The team of volunteers would approach cave owners and, if allowed in, take photos and draw a brief sketch.

The caves are being surveyed with a 3D laser scanner, producing a full measured record of them in three dimensions.

"We've been quite successful in bringing Nottingham's caves to a worldwide audience," said Dr Strange-Walker.

"Nottingham caves are pretty unique in Britain. There's nowhere else in Britain that has anything like this number or range of caves from medieval right up to the 20th century.

"The project has really started to put Nottingham back on the map for having caves again."

He has recorded a variety of caves over the course of the project.

Some of the finest are deemed to be those that belonged to Alderman Thomas Herbert, who cut a series of caves under his property in Park Terrace, in the Park.

These include Columns Cave, pictured on this page, which features numerous columns and statues of what appear to be Gods and Goddesses.

Dr Strange-Walker said it was also fascinating to visit his herbarium cave, which has a stove in it with a chimney poking out of the ground. The hot smoke would also run around the edge of the cave in concealed channels, providing extra warmth.

Dr Strange-Walker said he believed it had been used as a dark greenhouse for growing plants of some kind, or for entertaining friends in a warmer environment.

Through this study, the team discovered another previously-unknown cave under Mr Herbert's house. This was filled with rubble and rubbish and was split into two rooms, each about four by ten metres. Dr Strange-Walker said they appeared to have been used as wine cellars as they are lined with shelves and partitions.

The team are also hoping to enter another one of Mr Herbert's caves called Daniel in the Lion's Den, which has sandstone carvings depicting the biblical tale of Daniel.
 
By contrast to these Victorian-cut caves, the Rock Cemetery, in Mansfield Road, features an 18th-century underground sand mine.

Dr Strange-Walker said underground burial tunnels were built after the First World War but the catacombs were never brought into fruition and still lie empty today.

Meanwhile in the Lace Market, a medieval malting cave lies beneath the Propaganda nightclub in Broadway.

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