Cameron, D.G.; Bloodworth, A.J.; Harrison, D.J.; Highley, D.E.; Holloway, S.. 1999 Mineral resource information for development plans : phase one West Midlands : resources and constraints (Birmingham, Coventry, Dudley, Sandwell, Solihull, Walsall and Wolverhampton). British Geological Survey, 51pp. (Mineral Resources Series, WF/99/003) (Unpublished)
Abstract
This report is one of a series prepared by the British Geological
Survey for various administrative areas in England and Wales for
Phase One of the Department of the Environment, Transport and the
Regions Research Project Mineral Resource Information for
Development Plans.
The report and accompanying map relate to the former Metropolitan
County of the West Midlands and includes the Unitary Planning
Authorities of Birmingham, Coventry, Dudley, Sandwell, Solihull,
Walsall and Wolverhampton. They delineate and describe the
mineral resources of current or potential, economic interest in the
area and relate these to national planning designations which may
represent constraints on the extraction of minerals. Three major
elements of information are presented and described:
• the geological distribution and importance of mineral resources
• the extent of mineral planning permissions and the location of
current mineral workings
• the extent of selected planning constraints (national statutory
designations)
This wide range of information, much of which is scattered and not
always available in a consistent and convenient form, is presented
on a digitally-generated summary map in combination with that for
Warwickshire. The map is produced at 1:100 000 scale, which is
convenient for overall display and allows for a legible topographic
base on which to depict the information. In addition, as the data are
held digitally using a Geographical Information System (GIS), easy
revision, updating and customisation are possible, including
presentation of subsets of the data at larger scales.
Basic mineral resource information is essential to support mineral
exploration and development activities for resource management
and land-use planning, as baseline data for environmental impact
studies and environmental guidelines. It also enables a more
sustainable pattern and standard of development to be achieved by
valuing mineral resources as national assets.
The purpose of the work is to assist all interested parties involved in
the preparation and review of development plans, both in relation to
the extraction of minerals and the protection of mineral resources
from sterilisation, by providing a knowledge base on the nature and
extent of mineral resources and the environmental constraints which
may affect their extraction. However, it is anticipated that the maps
and report will also provide valuable data for a much wider
audience, including the minerals industry, the Planning Inspectorate,
the Environment Agency, the Countryside Commission, other agencies and government bodies, environmental interests and the
general public.
The mineral resource information has been produced by the
collation and interpretation of data principally held by the British
Geological Survey. The methodology for the collection and display
of the data is described and a range of sources of information and
further contacts is presented. The mineral resources covered are
coal, crushed-rock aggregate, sand and gravel, brick clay, sandstone,
silica sand and secondary aggregates.
Information
Programmes:
A Pre-2012 Programme
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