Published online by Cambridge University Press: 17 March 2016
In a tolerably deep ravine, surrounded by trees and brushwood growing in wild profusion, was, until lately, a cave, in that member of the carboniferous formation locally called the “Great Limestone,” and situated about one mile and a quarter north from the town of Stanhope, in the county of Durham. The limestone is now being worked for the purpose of supplying the Weardale Iron Company with a flux used in the operation of smelting their ironstone; and consequently the cave has been laid bare to the light of day.
The cave was much visited a few years ago, both by strangers and persons living in the locality, but probably few of the visitors ever studied the excavating forces by means of which the cave was hollowed out of the solid limestone, and fewer still, if any, would think that they were treading on a primeval burial-place.
Doubtless the excavation must be mainly due to aqueous agency, but a reference to Sir Charles Lyell's ‘Principles of Geology,’ Professor Phillips's ‘Treatise on Geology,’ and Richardson's ‘Geology,’ shows that our leading writers on this subject consider that the first cause of a cavern must have been a fracture in the limestone rock, consequent on the upheaval of the strata, and that water then finding access to the crack, would wear it out to its present dimensions.