Abstract
Rock salt occurs in the Keuper Marl Series of Cheshire. There are two saliferous beds, the lower being 190 m and the upper 404 m thick. However, most of the Triassic rocks in Cheshire are covered by thick superficial deposits. Nevertheless natural brine springs occur at the surface and salt has been evaporated from these springs since pre-Roman times. Subsidence occurs as a result of wild brine pumping. Gradual collapse takes place above the subterranean brine runs giving rise to cambered depressions at the surface, the flanks of which are often interrupted by tension scars. Flashes occupy many of these depressions. The most disastrous subsidences occurred towards the end of the nineteenth century due to bastard brine pumping, that is, pumping, with reckless abandon, from old mine workings. The associated subsidences were rapid and caused the destruction of many buildings. One of the awkward characteristics of subsidence in salt due to wild brine pumping is that it is unpredictable, indeed subsidence may occur several kilometres from the point of extraction. This means that an individual brine pumper could not and still cannot be proved responsible for subsidence. Accordingly, the Cheshire Brine Subsidence Compensation Board was established by act of Parliament at the end of the nineteenth century which obliged each brine pumper to contribute towards the compensation fund. Because controlled solution mining has not given rise to subsidence in its 40 years of operation this form of extraction is eventually to be extended throughout the whole of the salt field, another field is now being developed. It is hoped to phase out wild brine pumping by the 1980's.
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