Blog for the Triangle Troglodytes, a caving club in the Raleigh, Durham, Chapel Hill area of North Carolina. As an organization we are affiliated with the National Speleological Society (NSS) through which we are better known as a grotto. Our purpose is to promote the interest and exploration of caves in and around our state.
Sunday, July 11, 2010
Lunchtime Trip Underground
Rob Harris had permission to visit the Old Lead Mine inside the Raleigh Beltline. He hadn't been there since he was a little boy, but he was curious to visit again. We walked the short distance from his friends' driveway to a cool entrance on July 10, 2010.
The entrance is a few feet high and sloped down toward a shallow pool about ten feet in.
The ceiling got higher as we proceeded up the next slope, and the passage maintained its six-foot width despite small breakdown pieces along the way. Sixty feet from the entrance a very large breakdown slab covers the floor. Just beyond that a two-foot deep pool marks the back of the mine.
Rob and I surveyed and photographed the mine passage. While I was finishing the sketches, Rob investigated the rock to better understand the graphite mining.
Because all the soft walls appeared white and schist-like with quartz intrusions, we couldn't understand where the graphite was. However, stains on my hands indicated that we had indeed found the graphite. It's just a few percent of the rock. I was fortunate to find online the 1947 article "The Origin and Importance of the Raleigh Graphite" by John W. Harrington.
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