Mining tourism

Mining tourism

For the danger posed by landmines, see War zone safety.

This is a travel topic that deals with all man-made structures under and above ground whose primary purpose is or was the extraction of natural resources as well as their remains, associated culture and small scale resource gathering such as gold panning from rivers and creeks.

See also: Underground works

Understand

Inside Falun copper mine

Humans have dug more or less elaborate holes in the ground in order to extract resources since time immemorial. The oldest things archaeologists interpret as mines were found in modern day Egypt and were used to extract flint-stone some 30,000 years ago. Since then both the need for resources and the technology with which to extract them have experienced tremendous development. Modern-day open pit mines have transformed whole landscapes and once they are done removing all the desirable resources, they often leave man made lakes and ponds that can become a source of economic activity and tourism in themselves. While some active mines can be visited, most mines are closed to the general public with only a small visitor center if anything. However, some former mines have been converted into tourist attractions and you can learn a lot about the history of the region or of mining in general by taking a guided tour.

Some towns owe their existence or at least their current size to mining, be it Kiruna and Falun in Sweden, Norilsk, Nikel and Kostomuksha in Russia or continued human presence on Svalbard. On the other hand, many former mining communities have been deserted once resources run out, and bustling cities can become ghost towns overnight. In some cases a mine itself is the reason for the abandonment of settlements, either to make room for open-pit mining or due to environmental damage through mining.

Mining has also added its own rich character to the cultural heritage of many regions, from the vocal imagery of the powerful folk ballad to the literary works recording old miners' myths.

Mining and the associated culture – especially in the context of coal and steel – have also influenced things as seemingly unrelated or trivial as the names or nicknames of sports teams. Many areas that used to depend on mining have since entered a decline, and despite efforts to diversify the economy, many of those areas have become "rust belts". That said, people are often immensely proud of the mining heritage of their region and some even continue to live those traditions after having moved elsewhere for a job.

Open pit versus shafts and tunnels

Modern mining often involves open pits created by huge machines. Older mines dug by hand often involve deep shafts and adits (long narrow corridors) underground. For instance the silver mines at Kongsberg have their deepest point 1,000 m below the surface (several hundred meters below sea level). The intensive 1600s mining at Falun eventually resulted in a collapse of the underground sections, leaving a 100 m deep and 1 km wide crater. A major problem in (almost) all mining operations is water. In open pit mines groundwater has to be lowered, sometimes hundreds of meters, leading to ground movements that are still not entirely understood and that have in the past damaged houses and other structures several kilometers away from the mine. Once the mining is concluded, the rising groundwater also results in ground movements, which may further endanger property. In underground mines, water has to be pumped out and of course this water has to go somewhere. In some cases it is simply pumped into abandoned shafts, but elsewhere ponds have been created just from surplus mine water.

Salt mining

Salt was a valuable commodity for most of history and scarce in almost all inland regions. The very word "salary" is derived from the Latin word for salt. While sea salt played a role in some areas, it was then as it is now vastly overshadowed by mined salt. While the people in the North Frisian Islands burned the ground beneath their feet to access the salt contained in the peat, other regions had access to vast underground salt domes, which gave rise to fabulous wealth and to names often relating to former or current salt production, such as Bad Reichenhall with "hall" being a frequent component in city names in Central Europe related to salt mining.

Mothballed rock salt mines are considered among the safest options to get rid of radioactive waste through deep geological disposal of such materials. The crystalline salt is an excellent thermal conductor to keep the waste cool, and naturally seals cavities to prevent leakage of active materials into ground water. It is expected that at least some mines that are open to the public will be converted for such waste disposal purposes in the near future, making them inaccessible to mankind for the next 50,000 years. If you have an interest in visiting decommissioned salt mines, do it as soon as you can.

Quarries

Quarrying is open-pit extraction of bulk minerals such as granite, limestone and gravel. While toxic pollution is less of a concern, they can be enormous in size (even the pre-industrial ones) and cause landslides. As their products are expensive to transport, they tend to be near population centers. Historically stones were only transported long distances in exceptional circumstances or when a convenient water route was available. As such, the stones used in pre-industrial buildings often serve as a rough "geological map" of the area.

See

Australia

Every state of Australia has a mining history, and in most states there are former mining sites that are considered vital heritage locations, and current active locations that have facilities for visitors and tourists to visit and view.

New South Wales

  • Broken Hill. Founded as a silver mining town, there are numerous tourist attractions in the city connected to this history. It is visited as an excursion stop on the westbound Indian Pacific.

Queensland

South Australia

Victoria

  • Central Deborah Mine, 76 Violet St (2 minutes drive or a short walk towards Melbourne from the town centre), -36.764866°, 144.269667°, +61 3 5443 8322. There are three variations on the mine tour. There is the surface tour where you can look around the mine workings, which have been reconfigured a little for tourism. There is gold panning available, and you can climb the poppet head and follow the overhead link to the battery crusher. The standard underground tour goes underground into the old minue workings. There are various types of drilling rigs, and other demonstrations making for a very interesting tour. This tour also includes the self-guided surface tour. The third adventure tour does all that the first two tours do, but also includes about 30 minutes on level 3 of the mine. This involves going down ladders, and seeing a section of the mine that hasn't been extensively modified for tourism use. It also includes a lunch or cornish pasties back in a function room that has been built back on the main level of the mine.

Western Australia

  • Kalgoorlie Super Pit, Fimiston, West Australia, -30.7774°, 121.5055°. The Kalgoorlie Super Pit in Western Australia is a vast open pit that is visitable by guided tours. Travellers on the eastbound Indian Pacific can make an excursion stop here. 2015-12-08

Bolivia

Chile

  • Humberstone and Santa Laura Saltpeter Works. Out in the Atacama Desert near Iquique, much of the world's production of saltpeter, a naturally-occurring, nitrate-containing mineral used to be extracted in these UNESCO-listed sites and the surrounding region. Prior to the early 20th century, when the synthetic production of nitrogen compounds became available, saltpeter was such a valuable agricultural resource that a long and bitter war over the area was staged between Chile, Bolivia, and Peru. Now the production is minuscule compared to its heyday and pertains mostly to the organic growing enthusiasts in North America.

Canada

Museum entrance, Springhill

  • Springhill Miners' Museum, 145 Black River Rd, 45.634°, -64.074°, +1 902-597-3449. Springhill, Nova Scotia, was the site of a large coal mine active from the 19th century until 1958. It was shut down after an explosion in 1956 killed 39 and a 'bump' (underground earthquake) in 1958 killed 75. Today the museum offers underground tours. There is a song The Ballad of Springhill, about the 1958 disaster, which has been recorded or performed by many artists including Peter, Paul & Mary, U2, and husband/wife duo Ewen MacColl and Peggy Seeger.
  • Cape Breton Miners Museum, 17 Museum St, Glace Bay, Cape Breton, 46.193°, -59.942°, +1 902-849-4522. 10AM-6PM (end-May to Thanksgiving). Underground mine tour, mining history museum (C$6/person) with modern exhibits. Miners Village Restaurant. Stroll through a historic village. "Men of the Deeps" miners' choir offers performances ($13/person) several times per season. C$15/person 2016-04-04
  • Frank Slide Interpretive Centre, Hwy 3 Crowsnest Pass, Blairmore, 49.600°, -114.394°, +1 403-562-7388. The small coal-mining town of Frank in the Crowsnest Pass region of what is now Alberta had 82 million metric tons of rock come crashing down on it in 1903. Turtle Mountain, above the town, had unstable geology to begin with and had been made more unstable by extensive mining. This was Canada's deadliest rockslide ever, killing 90, but fortunately it missed much of the town.

Estonia

  • East Estonia, 59.31077°, 27.41089°. The region lies at the heart of Estonia's century-old oil shale mining, which is commemorated by a number of local museums. Some of the highest hills in the otherwise flat region are man-made "ash mountains"—huge piles of oil shale industry waste—that have been forested and put to recreational use. 2017-12-18

Finland

  • Tytyri Mining Museum, 60.2637°, 24.0696°, +358 44 369 1309. The calcite mine in Tytyri near Lohja is open to visitors by guided tour (other languages than Finnish must be pre-booked). Minibuses take visitors 100 m underground where also a museum exhibiting the history of the mine is located. adults €14, children €8 2015-12-08
  • Lampivaara amethyst mine, Luostontie 4 (Luosto, Lapland), 67.119°, 26.939°, kaivos@ametistikaivos.fi. The only amethyst mine in Europe. It is worked with little machinery, not to exhaust it too soon. The entrance fee includes a guided tour to the quarry and every visitor may dig his/hers own amethyst and keep it – one of them if you pick several.
  • Gold digging grounds, 68.5°, 25.5°. There was a gold rush in the 1870s to Ivalonjoki in the Hammastunturi Wilderness Area, and a new one to Lemmenjoki in the 1940s. There are still people digging and panning gold in both areas, although digging by machine ended in the national park in 2020. This is the largest national park in Finland and the area is generally wilderness – and was at the time of the gold rushes – but the gold areas by Lemmenjoki are easily reached by car and a boat tour, and some of the locals arrange gold related tours. Many different techniques, old and new, have left their marks and can be studied. The "crown station" in the Hammastunturi area can be visited by a trek, a former village and some of the gold grounds (by Sotajoki) can be approached with a sturdy car.
  • Tankavaara, 68.181°, 27.100°. Touristic gold village, with heritage from a 1930s gold rush. Exhibition with large mineral collection, possibility to try gold panning, yearly gold panning championship.

France

Germany

Winding tower of UNESCO World Heritage site Zeche Zollverein, Essen, Ruhr

  • Precious Stone Mine Steinkaulenberg (Edelsteinminen Steinkaulenberg), Idar-Oberstein, Tiefensteiner Str. 87, 49.729225°, 7.287254°, +49 6781 901918.
  • Himmelfahrt show mine (Himmelfahrt Fundgrube, Besucherbergwerk Freiberg), Freiberg, Fuchsmühlenweg 9, 50.928333°, 13.358056°, +49 3731 394571. 300-year old silver mine, used to demonstrate the history of mining during different eras. There are different tours, from 45 minutes to 5 hours, illustrating geology, history and technology of eight centuries. The entire town of Freiberg has a long and storied history of mining (though since the fall of the GDR no active mining anywhere in the vicinity) and is also home to the second oldest technical university in the world, mostly dedicated to geology, mining and related sciences Tours €13–40 (reduced €6–35) 2016-08-27
  • Salzbergwerk Berchtesgaden. The oldest active salt mine in Germany - since 13th century. The tour takes the visitors on a mini-rail and boat ride, as well as showcasing various techniques used for the mining.
  • The whole Ruhr area was associated with coal mining and heavy industry for over a century. While most pits and cokeries are closed by now, you can still see impressive remains like the UNESCO world heritage Zeche Zollverein in Essen, as well as creatively re-used former mining and industrial sites that were transformed into parks, exhibition halls event locations or an amphitheatre. See also Industrial Heritage Trail.
  • Lüneburg owes much of its former wealth (still seen in old buildings) to its long history of salt mining; giving one of the resources needed for the Hanseatic cities to become major exporters of preserved fish.
  • The Central German Lake District is the result of open pit lignite mining and there are still a few operational mines in the area. Similar things can be said of the Lusatian Lake District

Indonesia

Luxembourg

Nauru

  • Nauru, -0.527288°, 166.936724°. Known as the "Topside" by the locals, the interior of the world's smallest republic is literally a dead wasteland left over from the decades-long extensive phosphate mining. Conveyor belts and other rusting mining equipment are dispersed throughout the rest of the South Pacific island. 2017-11-10

Norway

Røros with the landmark church is a small mining town developed around 1645. The Pippi Longstocking TV-series was shot there in 1960s.

  • White Caves (Kvite grotter), Gudvangen (Road E6), 60.8572°, 6.7632°. Abandoned mines open to public during summer. The white stone is anorthosite and exists in greater quantity at Gudvangen than anywhere else. Fee
  • [Silvermines at Kongsberg](http://www.bvm.museum.no{{dead_link|December_2020}})_ (Sølvgruvene på Kongsberg), Kongsberg, 59.632778°, 9.599444°. A train brings the visitors 2300 m in. More than 300 years of silver mining has left a web of some 1000 km of tunnels, and 300 shafts of which the deepest is 1000 m. The mines cover an area of 30 km². More than 1 million kilograms of pure silver were extracted. Fee
  • Røros mining town (Røros by og kopperverk), Røros, Trøndelag, 62.566667°, 11.366667°. The Røros copper mines were in operation for 333 years. Røros was one of two privileged mining towns (Kongsberg the other). Røros retain the style from the time when it was developed. The unusual church dominates the skyline. The town and mines are a UNESCO world heritage site. 20px.
  • Limestone mines at Eide, Eide near Molde (Road 64), 62.893246°, 7.365004°. Abandoned limestone/marble mines can be visited by groups. A wide hall with stage and seating. Access by boat across a small pond. The temperature is a constant 6°C.
  • Cobalt color mines (Blaafarveverket i Modum), Drammen, Buskerud county, 59.912778°, 9.8875°. Blaafarveværke began operations in the 1770s. The works mined cobalt ore and manufactured blue cobalt glass (smalt) and cobalt blue (cobalt aluminate) pigment. In its heyday, it supplied 80 percent of the world market for cobalt pigments. Open for visitors. Buildings are also used for art exhibitions. Fee: Yes

Pakistan

  • [Khewra Salt Mine](http://pmdc.gov.pk), Khewra, 32.648°, 73.008°, +92 544 231137. The discovery of the world's second largest salt mine dates back to the time of Alexander the Great's Indian Campaign of the 4th century BC, although the current tunnel was started in 1872 during the British rule of the subcontinent. The mine is a large tourist attraction, with several constructions made of colourfully illuminated salt bricks inside, and is the only source of the pinkish "Himalayan salt", which is almost fetishistically sought after by whole food enthusiasts. 2017-02-04

Poland

  • Wieliczka Salt Mine, Daniłowicza 10, Wieliczka, 49.9835°, 20.0538°, +48 12 278-73-02. Continuously in production between the 13th century and 2007, which made it one of the oldest enterprises in the world at the time it closed. This mine is famous for its many statues and chapels carved out of rock salt by the miners. 2015-12-09

Romania

  • Salina Turda. Terminated mine, nowadays used as amusement park
  • Salina Vech. Impressively large galleries of the old salt mines with a museum

South Africa

  • Kimberley Mine, S Circular Rd, Kimberley, -28.739°, 24.755°, +27 53 839 4600. A former open-pit and underground diamond mine, operating from 1871-1914. The open pit, also known as the Big Hole, is the largest hole in the ground excavated without machinery. There's a museum on site as well. 2015-12-13

Spain

  • Las Médulas, Castile and Leon. A World Heritage site, Las Médulas was the largest open-pit gold mine in the entire Roman Empire. The former pit floor, covered in dense vegetation after the mine was abandoned, now looks almost like a naturally formed canyon, with the sides dotted by eroded hills shaped by the extensive use of a Roman hydraulic mining technique known as ruina montium ("ruining the mountain"), whereby water was injected into man-made bores so it could pressure the rock walls surrounding it to crack open.

Sweden

Mining museum in Falun

  • Bergslagen, northern Svealand, Sweden. This region north of Lake Mälaren is the historical heartland of Swedish mining, metallurgy and industry. It was once one of the most productive mining areas in Europe, but has now declined into a single mine. However, a lot of mining heritage remains open for visitors. 2017-10-03
    • Falu Gruva (Falun Mine), Falun, Dalarna, 60.603824°, 15.628738°. The Falun copper mine operated for around 1000 years until 1992. It was for centuries the largest copper mine in Europe and supplied about 70% of all copper need in Europe. Several thousand shafts were dug. The mining company is possibly the oldest business enterprise in the world. Now museum open to the public. The mines and the town are a UNESCO world heritage site. 20px 2017-07-21
  • Norrbotten megasystem. An industrial cluster around the 500 kilometre Iron Ore Line through Arctic Scandinavia.
    • Kiruna mine, Kiruna (The tours starts at the main square at the tourist information centre.), 67.850854°, 20.196432°. Almost 3 hour guided tour to the iron mine takes you to the mininge company's (LKAB) visitor centre located at 540 metres underground. The history, as well as ongoing mining operations and Kiruna town moving due to the mine subsidence, effecting large parts of the city, is discussed. The tour can be booked in the information centre or online. The mine is part of the Norrbotten Megasystem, a 500-kilometre long industrial cluster. 360 SEK (adult), 260 SEK (student/senior), 60 SEK (child; 1 child, 6-15 years, for free per paying adult). 2017-07-21
  • Ytterby, 59.42571°, 18.32528°. A mine on Resarö, with one unusual distinction: nine chemical elements of the periodic table were discovered here, four of them named by the settlement: yttrium, ytterbium, terbium and erbium.
  • Museum of Science and Technology (Tekniska Museet). The museum's basement floor is furnished as a Swedish mine, with historical dioramas and exhibitions for the whole family.
  • Sala Silver Mine (Sala silvergruva), Drottning Christinas väg. 2021-04-19

Turkey

  • Çankırı Salt Cave, near Çankırı, 40.5445°, 33.7592°. Turkey's largest, and probably the oldest, salt mine. The exhausted galleries are open to public as a show cave.
  • Marble Museum, Saraylar, Marmara Island, 40.65305°, 27.65286°. A marble quarry abandoned during the Roman period, scattered by unfinished sculptures and monuments never made to their intended sites.
  • Zonguldak. Turkey's main coal mining area is slowly degenerating into a brownfield landscape as its coalfield, worked since the 1820s, runs out. Nevertheless, it has various sites and attractions associated with its mining history.

United Kingdom

See also: Industrial Britain

United States

  • Butte, Montana, 46.0038°, -112.5348°. Butte owes its existence to mining. Its most notable feature is the Berkeley Pit, a former copper-mining operation, now a water-filled chasm laden with so many heavy metals that it can kill birds who land in it. The exhibits and gift shop present its history with an odd mix of defensiveness about the past and pride in current remediation efforts. Butte also contains the World Museum of Mining with a reconstructed mining town and underground mine tours, as well as the Mineral Museum on the Montana Tech campus. 2021-01-15
  • The Industrialization of the United States was built on coal and steel. Most of what is now the "rust belt" was active in mining coal and the various ores needed to transform an agrarian backwater into the leading industrial power of the world. Some mines and related industries are on the American Industry Tour.
  • Similarly, many of the ghost towns of the American West were boomtowns that sprung up around gold and silver strikes, only to dwindle away once the mines were worked out. One of the best-preserved is near Yosemite National Park: Bodie, California, 38.2122°, -119.0156°. 2021-01-15
  • West Virginia Mine Wars Museum, 401 Mate St, Matewan, 37.6258°, -82.1743°. Closed until late 2021 due to COVID-19. Tucked in the remote mountains along the West Virginia/Kentucky border, this museum tells the little-known story of the huge wars fought between striking coal miners and law enforcement trying to break their strike. The Battle of Blair Mountain was the largest insurrection in the USA since the American Civil War, and the US Army was brought in to crush it. 2021-01-15

Do

One of the more obvious things often offered to tourists is gold panning, especially in areas where it has a tradition, like those invoking the Old West of the U.S.

The gold is by no means gone from the rivers and creeks of this world. While people believe it is possible to make a living by gold panning, chances are that the gold you find (if any) while panning in any river is not enough to pay for a first world lifestyle. However, gold panning is still practised especially in low income countries as an additional or only source of income.

At some destinations, a private company will maintain an active claim on a river where there's a little gold left so that visitors may try their hand at gold panning.

  • Chicken, Alaska, USA, 64.07°, -141.94°. This tiny village mined 55,000 ounces (1710 kg) of gold from 1959 to 1971; it is now an off-the-grid partial ghost town with three operating businesses, a small post office and an airstrip. There is a seasonal gravel road. The old Pedro Gold Dredge #4 is open for daily tours and a couple of vendors offer recreational gold panning.

Rockhounds (amateur geologists) search for gemstones or fossils.

Talk

In many areas that have a long mining tradition a whole range of mining related terms have been coined and in some cases entered the general vocabulary. They can be confusing even to native speakers of the respective languages.

Stay safe

Before modern times, miners commonly died in accidents, if not from unhealthy conditions. Even today, mining is a hazardous industry.

If you are on a guided tour at a mining site, stay with the tour. Don't drift away or get diverted. If the tour is accredited and official, miners have specific guidelines of what not to do. Take careful note, and follow the rules.

Old, abandoned and unmaintained mine workings inherently pose more risk than those that are in active use. Exploring these as a lone traveller is advised against in very strong terms, consider joining an appropriate specialist group instead. The small number of enthusiast and research groups that exist have built up appropriate procedures, expertise and trust with site owners over many years. Even when precautions are taken, those expeditions inherently pose some danger and thus people get stuck or injured in far reaches of underground structures, making it all the more imperative to have others know about your precise plans and whereabouts.

Bad air is also a serious hazard in many abandoned mine workings, as exposed strata continue to oxidise. This creates lethal pockets of carbon dioxide or monoxide, amongst other toxic gases. It is not without reason that mining folklore talks about various forms of damp (such as blackdamp), or about the proverbial 'canary in a coal mine'. Weather and sub surface conditions may shift various damps into pools at the surface, which you'll notice when your dog (the modern canary) drops dead. Cave canem!

Respect

As mining can be both a vital part of a local economy, and a hazard for the environment and traditional lifestyle, it tends to be a sensitive political topic. Be aware that locals can have strong opinions on the issue.

See also

  • Ghost towns#Gold rush towns and abandoned mining communities. Many ghost towns used to be mining communities; a few were abandoned due to environmental disaster or after losing a road or rail line; many more were deserted after too little ore remained to be profitable.
  • Industrial tourism — many mining regions are also places to see former or modern day industrial plants processing the extracted resources.