Somerset
rock production has been officially recorded since 1895 (with the
exception of the World War 1 years and without government publication
at county level for much of the 1950s and 60s).
Limestone has been the main rock produced in Somerset and increasingly
large proportions of this have been won from Mendip.
Output until 1919 was below 0.5 million tons in most years. By 1931,
output had nearly tripled with the build up of road construction
and maintenance in the interwar period, but then fluctuated considerably
over the next twenty years. In the period 1951 to 62 output rose
from 2.0 million tons to 3.0 million tons with post-war reconstruction,
continuing to rise rapidly to a new peak in 1973 of 12.6 million
tons, largely on the basis of 'exports' to south-east England and
the growing use of rail transport. Increased demand led to a new
peak of 18.8 million tons in 1990 at a time when national construction
output was especially high. Since then, with falling demand, production
has fallen back to a level generally between 11.0 and 14.0 million
tons per annum. Output of igneous rocks (mostly the Silurian andesite)
is currently understood to be about 0.5 million tons per annum.
Almost all the stone quarried is used as aggregates, mainly for making
roads (with andesite for the surface and limestone for the lower
road courses) and for concrete. Smaller amounts of limestone are
used for lime (used mainly in steel making), for soil conditioning
on farms and as a building stone. Somerset ranks third after Derbyshire
and Leicestershire in terms of aggregates output. Since 1974, Somerset
production of crushed rock has averaged about 10% of the national
output.
In recent years, all crushed rock aggregate production in Somerset
(typically about 11.5 million tons per annum) has been won from Mendip.
County output in recent years has equated to about half the rock
production for the whole of the South West region (22–23 million
tons). Over the last 20 years, 62–70% of rock produced in the
south-west has been used within the region. Between a third and a
quarter (and generally falling), and mostly from Somerset, has been
destined for the south-east of England. |
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Click map to enlarge view.
In annual tonnage terms,
south-east deliveries rose to over 11 million tons in the late 1980s,
fell to just over 5 million tons in the 1990s, moving back to over
7 million tons in 2001.
Total permitted reserves of rock in Somerset quarries (2003) were
671 million tons, equivalent to 54 years of production, almost exactly
half of the regional total. As well as active quarries, the Somerset
figure included reserves at about a dozen (mostly small) inactive
sites. |