Kents Cavern
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Kents Cavern is a cave system in Devon, England. It is about a mile from Torquay and is notable for its archaeological and geological features. The caves are a geological Site of Special Scientific Interest (since 1952) and a Scheduled Ancient Monument (since 1957), and are open to the public.[1][2]
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[edit] History
[edit] As an archæological site
Kents Cavern is first recorded as Kents Hole Close on a 1659 deed when the land was leased to John Black.[3] The earliest evidence of exploration of the caves in historic times are the inscriptions "William Petre 1571" and "Robert Hedges 1688" engraved on stalagmites, and the first recorded excavation was that of Thomas Northmore in 1824.[3] Northmore's work attracted the attention of Dean Buckland, the first Reader in Geology at the University of Oxford, who sent a party including John MacEnery to explore the caves in an attempt to find evidence that Mithras was once worshipped in the area.[4] MacEnery, the Roman Catholic chaplain at Torre Abbey, conducted systematic excavations between 1824 and 1829.[3][4] When MacEnery reported to the British Association the discovery of flint tools below the stalagmites on the cave floor, his work was derided as contrary to Bishop James Ussher's Biblical chronology dating the Creation to 4004 BC.[5]
In September 1845 the recently created Torquay Natural History Society requested permission from Sir Lawrence Palk to explore the caves in order to obtain fossils and artifacts for the planned Torquay Museum, and as a result Edward Vivian and William Pengelly were allowed to conduct excavations between 1846 and 1858.[3] Vivian reported to the Geological Society in 1847, but at the time it was generally believed that early humans had entered the caves long after the formation of the cave structures examined.[6] This changed when in the Autumn of 1859, following the work of Pengelly at Kents Cavern and caves in Brixham and of Jacques de Perthes in France, the Royal Society, the Society of Antiquaries, and the British Association agreed that the excavations had established the antiquity of humanity.[6]
In 1865 the British Association created a committee, led by Pengelly, to fully explore the cave system over the course of fifteen years.[3] It was Pengelly's party that discovered Robert Hedges' stalagmite inscription, and from the stalagmite's growth since that time deduced that human-created artifacts found under the formation could be half a million years old.[7] Pengelly plotted the position of every bone, flint, and other artifact he discovered during the excavations, and afterwards continued working with the Torquay Natural History Society until his death at his home less than 2 km from the caves in 1892.[8]
Kents Cavern 4 is a prehistoric maxilla (upper jawbone) fragment discovered in the cavern during a 1927 excavation by the Torquay Natural History Society. It is thought to be between 37,000 and 40,000 years old, and although previously it was thought to only be 31,000 years old, it has been recently re-dated. Whether the specimen belongs to Homo sapiens, as originally described, or Homo neanderthalensis as may now be possible, remains a mystery. The specimen is on display at the Torquay Museum.
In 1954 a bottle was discovered in a recess containing the message "Entered this vault for the first time on Monday 3 December 1877 — J L Widger. How wonderful are thy works O God."[9]
[edit] As a tourist attraction
In 1903 Kents Cavern, then part of Lord Haldon's estate, was sold to Francis Powe, a carpenter who originally used the caves as a workshop while making beach huts for the Torquay sea front.[2] Powe's son, Leslie Powe, turned the caves into a tourist attraction by laying concrete paths and installing electric lighting, and building visitor facilities which were later improved in turn by his son John Powe.[10] The caves, now owned by Nick Powe, celebrated 100 years of Powe family ownership on 23rd August 2003 with special events including an archæological dig for children and a display by a cave rescue team.[11] A year later a new £500,000 visitor centre was opened, including a restaurant and gift shop.[2]
Attracting 80,000 tourists a year, Kents Cavern is an important tourist attraction and this was recognised in 2000 when it was awarded Showcave of the Year award and later in November of 2005 when it was awarded a prize for being Torbay's Visitor Attraction of the year.
[edit] Geology
The caverns and passages at the site were created around 2 million years ago by water action.
[edit] References
- ^ English Nature, "Kents Cavern", Natural England, http://www.english-nature.org.uk/citation/citation_photo/1000875.pdf (accessed 2007-02-18)
- ^ a b c bbc.co.uk, "Visitor centre for ancient caves", BBC, http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/england/devon/3867385.stm (accessed 2007-02-18)
- ^ a b c d e John R. Pike, Torquay (Torquay: Torbay Borough Council Printing Services, 1994), 5
- ^ a b Percy Russell, A History Of Torquay (Torquay: Devonshire Press Limited, 1960), 107
- ^ Russell, 108
- ^ a b Russell, 109
- ^ Pike, 5-6
- ^ Russell, 110
- ^ Chips Barber, Torquay (Exeter: Obelisk Publications, 1992), 23
- ^ bbc.co.uk, "Kents Cavern in Torquay celebrates 100 years under the same ownership", BBC, http://www.bbc.co.uk/devon/news_features/2003/kents_cavern.shtml (accessed 2007-02-18)
- ^ bbc.co.uk, "Special events mark Kents Cavern's centenary", BBC, http://www.bbc.co.uk/devon/family_friendly/kents_cavern_100.shtml (accessed 2007-02-18)
[edit] External links