Missing Monuments

close
more_vert

Stoneshifter wrote:
I get out a lot - like for most of the summer - and am still interested in peat. It's not laid down equally. It's just decomposed sphagnum moss so wherever that's growing, in the wet, is where the peat will grow. Some places it's deep - like really deep - and some places it's soil - and there is no peat. It's a hopeless case really and, if we'd wanted to stabilise atmospheric CO2, should have started in about 1930!
Hi Stoneshifter,

Interesting stuff.... what's the acidity of the soil like up there? Dartmoor's pretty harsh apparently (as a consequence of a number of factors - not just the sphagnum) . It all has a bearing on how fast sphagnum becomes peat, I guess...

Here's an interesting site:

http://www.legendarydartmoor.co.uk/peat_moor.htm

....he takes the depths I've quoted (as I've seen them somewhere before) with a pinch of salt... making saltpeater! Boom! Boom!

Peace

Pilgrim

X

It's hyper-acidic. Thanks for that link - I'll get back and reread it. There's coal in the landscape, including anthracite, and that was exploited historically, rather than the peat. I burn a very small amount in the summer and it is my sole midge repellent. I've seen peat six feet deep on Smithills Moor, near Manchester, in a couple of places but there's nothing like that depth in the part of the North Pennines I frequent. The unusual thing in my peat deposits is a seam of bog oak pieces about halfway through. The bog oak fragments and pieces are usually knotty pieces and rootstock of Birch and Scotch pine and almost invariably have toolmarks, where they've been sliced off. I assume the bog oak is the remnant of some kind of forest regrowth chopping and associate it with early copper smelting in the valley below. I've tried to interest various archaeologists in the stuff but they seem brain dead - you'd suppose they'd be keen to hear of another early source of copper (but they're not). In some very dry summers the surface sphagnum dries out and dies - it turns yellow - and that is supposed to equate with a large amount of CO2 being released to the sky ...