Except in north-west Peeblesshire, no rocks of economic
value occur in the two counties; unless greywacke (whinstone), useful for
building and for road-making, may be so regarded. Before the period of
tree-planting, whinstone was much in evidence as stone-wall fences. The
whinstone being a stratified rock splits readily with a clean fracture. It
has undergone many contortions, which render it difficult
to deal with for building purposes, but the stonemasons of the district
are famous for their skill in its manipulation, producing as they do with
only a hammer and trowel beautifully-faced walls. Freestone abounds in the
carboniferous tracts, white and yellow as at Carlops, chocolate-coloured
as at West Linton. In the Dod Wood at Kirkurd are numerous old and new
quarries of white and red sandstone, where the red stone of the buildings
at Lyne Camp were probably obtained. Previous to 1841,
before the geological record was thoroughly understood, the
carbonaceous shales of coal and limestone were wrought at Carlops; and not
so long ago a coal pit was worked at Macbie Hill, where still a little
mining is done. Attempts were also made to find coal at Lindean and
Galashiels; and anthracite was said to have been got
at Grieston and Caddonfoot. But these attempts were bound to
fail, because the sandstones, the limestone, and the
millstone grit of the West Linton district all lie beneath the coal
measures, which are naturally thickest in the middle of their hollow
basin, and thinnest at the upturned edges. Such coal as is found in the
district will be "edge coal" while "anthracite" found in Silurian strata
is either black shale or has been formed from
quantities of embedded animal matter.
Lead used to be worked on the Medwyn in the sixteenth
century, and the excavations are now called "Silver Holes" from the fact
that silver was once obtained there. In the seventeenth century a lead
mine was said to exist on the north side of Selkirk,
at the head of the Linglie Burn, and a silver mine at Windy Neil. Lead has
also been mined for at the Bold Burn, at Grieston, at Windlestrae, at
Kershope in Yarrow, and at Innerleithen, where smelting furnaces were
discovered four feet beneath the surface in the
churchyard. Gold is said to have been found in Henderland, in Glengaber,
and Mount Benger Burns, in the reign of James V. A specimen from Glengaber
Burn is preserved in the Peebles Museum. Gold is also recorded as having
been obtained in the Douglas Braes at Douglas Craig and in Linglie Burn.
The Regent Morton had a contract for working gold at Henderland. But the
enterprise was unsuccessful. Veins of haematite occur here and there in
Silurian rock. At Noble House a bed of red haematite shale lies among the
green shales of the district, and was worked some twenty years ago. Iron
pyrites occur at Bowerhope, and oxide of iron is found in many of the
mosses. Silurian shales have often been worked for slate, as at Stobo and
Grieston quarries. Out of the former many of the houses in old Edinburgh
are said to have been roofed. These quarries are no longer worked, either
because they are exhausted, or because better material is now more easily
obtained. The felsite near Innerleithen has been
used for making curling stones. Lime quarries are common in the West
Linton district; and lochs in Selkirk have sometimes been drained for
their marl, a mixture of lime and clay, invaluable to the farmer.
Mineral springs are fairly numerous. A century ago the
well-known chalybeate spring at Innerleithen made the village a
fashionable summer-resort and furnished Sir Walter Scott with a setting
for his romance, St Ronan’s Well. This spring used to
be known as the "Doo Well" because of the pigeons that flocked to it. A
sulphurous spring at Castlecraig had the reputation of being stronger than
that of Moffat. At Rutherford near Carlops there is a chalybeate well,
"Heavenly Aqua"; another, "Philip’s Well," at
Catslacknowe in Selkirk; and two at Bowerhope. Calcareous springs have
been found in fifteen different places in Yarrow.
Alluvium peat is found in many of the hills, as is
shown by the not uncommon designation of "Peat Law." The hills of Manor,
the Moorfoots, and Auchencorth Moss, near Leadburn, are the best known
districts for peat. Experiments were made in the compression of peat by
the minister of Traquair about 1834; but, owing to railway extension and
the cheapening in the price of coal, the digging of peat is now confined
to the remoter districts amongst the hills. |