Farrant, A R. 2008. A walkers' guide to the geology and landscape of western Mendip. (Keyworth, Nottingham: British Geological Survey.) ISBN 978 085272576 4 The guide is available to purchase from the British Geological Survey https://shop.bgs.ac.uk/Shop/Product/BSP_BWMEND
North flank: Harptree and Smitham Hill
Parking is available at Harptree Woods
The picturesque villages of East and West Harptree are located at the base of the northern side of Mendip. Between the two villages lies Harptree Combe, a narrow gorge designated a Site of Special
Scientific Interest (SSSI), which is easily accessible along footpaths from either village. Harptree Combe [118]
Locally, manganese and zinc were mined from veins in the conglomerate, and there are signs of the old mine workings within the gorge. The large metal pipe running across the combe is part of Bristol Water’s 16 km long ‘line of works’. Completed in 1847, this is a series of aqueducts and tunnels feeding water from springs around Chewton Mendip to the Barrow Gurney reservoirs.
Several distinct wildlife habitats occur within the gorge including old ash woodland, rough grassland, marshy grassland, and rocky crags. The ash woodland is very rich in woody species, and interesting ground flora plants include dog’s-mercury, herb Paris, meadow saffron and yellow archangel. In the upper reaches of the combe, pedunculate oak replaces ash as the dominant tree, with old hazel coppice and drifts of bluebells in the spring. The walls of the aqueduct and bare rock faces are home to many different mosses and ferns, some of which are rare in southern England.
The top end of Harptree Combe leads up onto Smitham Hill [119]
Smitham Hill, as its name suggests, was also an important lead and zinc mining area. On top of the hill is the Smitham Chimney [120]
The earthworks of the mine buildings, the furnace, flues and reservoirs can still be seen, but all the other buildings were demolished in 1876 except the chimney. This fell into disrepair but was restored by the Mendip Society in the early 1970s.
The most extensive lead workings were around Gibbets Brow [121]
These were worked at the surface, creating the pockmarked gruffy ground. In about 1674 lead miners broke into Lamb Leer Cavern, containing one of the largest chambers on Mendip.
Between here and the Miners’ Arms, several large sinkholes occur. These have been formed by the dissolution of Carboniferous Limestone at depth, followed by collapse and subsidence of the cover rocks. Several fine examples occur south of Eaker Hill and can be seen from the road between the Castle of Comfort and Lamb Leer. The largest is the Devil’s Punch-Bowl, south of Swallet Farm [122]