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Stoke St Michael is a village and civil parish on the Mendip Hills 4 miles (6.4 km) north east of Shepton Mallet, ... Moon's Hill Quarry is a basalt quarry.
Moon's Hill Quarry (grid reference) is a 3.42 hectare geological Site of Special Scientific Interest at Stoke St Michael in Somerset, notified in 1996 [1] and is a Geological Conservation Review site.
Cook's Wood Quarry also known as Holcombe Quarry (grid reference) is a 0.8-hectare (2.0-acre) geological Site of Special Scientific Interest near Stoke St Michael on the Mendip Hills in Somerset, notified in 1988. This is a Geological Conservation Review Site. This site partially overlaps with St. Dunstan's Well Catchment SSSI.
Fairy Cave Quarry (grid reference) is between Stoke St Michael and Oakhill in the limestone of the Mendip Hills, in Somerset, England. Quarrying was first started on the site in the early 1920s. In 1963 the quarry was acquired by Hobbs (Quarries) Ltd., and production on a much larger scale began.
Doulting Stone Quarry: Doulting: Independent business. Dulcote Quarry (closed) Dulcote near Wells: Foster Yeoman – Bardon Aggregates: Halecombe: Leigh-on-Mendip: Tarmac: Gurney Slade Quarry: Gurney Slade between Binegar and Holcombe: Morris & Perry (Gurney Slade) Ltd Moon's Hill Quarry: Stoke St Michael: John Wainwright & Co Ltd
W/L Cave is part of the Fairy Cave Quarry group of caves between Stoke St Michael and Oakhill in the limestone of the Mendip Hills, in Somerset, England.. It is named after the initials of its discoverers, Bob Whitaker and Jerry Lavis, was first entered in the summer of 1967.
Balch Cave (grid reference) is a cave in Fairy Cave Quarry, near Stoke St Michael in the limestone of the Mendip Hills, in Somerset, England. [1] The cave is part of the complex of passages feeding to St. Dunstan's Well Catchment Site of Special Scientific Interest and an abandoned Bristol Water abstraction point.
Hillier's Cave (grid reference) is a cave in Fairy Cave Quarry, near Stoke St Michael in the limestone of the Mendip Hills, in Somerset, England. [1]It falls within the St. Dunstan's Well Catchment Site of Special Scientific Interest.