THE SADDLEWORTH ARCHAEOLOGICAL TRUST

                                                        Founded 1995


 

 

HONORARY SECRETARY:                D CHADDERTON                                                                                   HONORARY TREASURER:                K.BOOTH

                                                                        7, SHARON AVENUE                                                                                                                                                    CEANN

                                                                        GRASSCROFT                                                                                                                                                                   FRIEZLAND  LANE

                                                                        SADDLEWORTH                                                                                                                                                            GREENFIELD

                                                                        OLDHAM                                                                                                                                                                           OLDHAM

                                                                        OL4 4HP                                                                                                                                                                             OL3 7EU    

                                                    TEL. NO: 01457 820054                                                                                                                                                        TEL. NO: 01457 872092

                                                     E-mail: dchadderton1@beeb.net                                                                                                                  E-mail: kbbooth@talk21.com


 

 

 

Mr. T Flanagan and Ms. Adele Hayes,                                                                15th January 2004

Environmental Services Department,

Oldham Metropolitan Borough Council,

Civic Centre,

PO Box 30,                                                                                                               

West St.,

Oldham.

OL1 1UQ                                                        My Ref: DC1109h    

 

 

 

Dear Mr. Flanagan and Ms Hayes,

 

PLANNING APPLICATION PA/046136/03: WINDFARM COMPRISING 7 WIND TURBINES, ONE TEMPORARY ANEMOMETRY MAST, ONE PERMANENT ANEMOMETRY MAST, ELECTRICAL SWITCHING BUILDING, ACCESS TRACKS AND ASSOCIATED DEVELOPMENT ON LAND OFF HUDDERSFIELD ROAD, DENSHAW MOOR, SADDLEWORTH, OLDHAM

 

 

I am writing as Hon. Secretary of Saddleworth Archaeological Trust to register a major objection to the above proposal to build 7 wind turbines on part of Denshaw Moor, Saddleworth.

 

The grounds for our objection are as follows :-

 

1)        Archaeological Remains

.

1.1) The concentration of Mesolithic (Middle Stone Age) sites close to the proposed wind turbine area is one of the highest in the British Isles, and as the late Dr. Pat Stonehouse discusses in his Book “The Prehistory Of Saddleworth & Adjacent Areas” (The Planning Department already hold a copy), this is probably because in this area of the Pennines, the high part of the moorland barrier is at its narrowest.  The prehistoric tribes from either side of the Pennines thus found it easy to meet in this area to trade flints, skins, and other items.

 The presence of 200 known Mesolithic sites in the immediate vicinity of the proposed wind turbine area will mean that there are almost certainly many more undiscovered archaeological sites in and around the proposed area. Some of these known sites contained 40 flints, some contained at least 140 flints and some several thousand.   It should be noted that the peat was deposited on our moors after the end of the Mesolithic Period (circa 4000 BC), and this means that the worked flint artefacts generally only come to light on undisturbed moorland when the overlying peat cover is eroded away or removed by other means.

 

 

The OMBC hold, in the Planning Department, a set of maps extracted from Dr Stonehouse’s book, “The Prehistory of Saddleworth & Adjacent Areas”, showing the known Mesolithic Sites around the proposed area. (These were enclosed in our previous letter objecting to the wind turbine test mast, Ref DC1018, dated 10th December 2002 but a further map, showing both Mesolithic and Bronze Age sites, with the position of the proposed seven wind turbines is appended to this letter.)  Collections of worked flints from the Mesolithic period (Dr. Pat Stonehouse’s own collection contains over 10,000) are held in the Tolson Memorial Museum in Huddersfield with the earlier finds when Saddleworth was in the West Riding of Yorkshire.

 

 

1.2)    Another important archaeological site, that is almost under one of the proposed Turbines,  (No 1, at OS grid reference SD 993120) is at Ragstones, where not only the well known magnificent Bronze Age ceremonial Flint Dagger was found, but also some flint scrapers and other worked tools of the Mesolithic and Neolithic (New Stone Age) periods.

 

1.3)   There is a possibility that there is a Roman road running across the site of the proposed Wind Turbines that lines up with the North West gate out of the first Castleshaw Roman Fort.

 

1.4)    Two Mediaeval Iron Smelting Furnaces have been discovered within the area outlined of the proposed Wind Turbine Site in the Castleshaw valley:  These are almost certainly connected with the site of the vaccary associated with Roche Abbey that existed at the settlement at Grange in the Castleshaw valley in the 13th Century.  The presence of iron ore in the local rocks would indicate there might be other sites not yet discovered.

 

The Significance of the remains

 

It is acknowledged that the Roman road and medieval smelting sites are of local or regional importance and that full archaeological excavation would, in their case, be a suitable mitigation strategy.

 

 

It is considered by the University of Manchester Archaeological Unit that because the site is close to, and surrounded by the greatest concentration of Mesolithic Sites in the British Isles, together with other prehistoric remains, that any prehistoric remains within the wind turbine area must be considered to have at least Regional Significance.

 

 

The University of Manchester Archaeological Unit also consider that:

 

“In the event the study area was found to contain Mesolithic remains with exceptional elements such as a high density of sites, a particularly good level of survival and a high diversity of special features, the significance of those sites could be raised from regional to national.” 

 

Guidance to Planners on significance of remains

 

 It should be noted that in the English Heritage Guidance paper “MANAGING LITHIC SCATTERS, Archaeological guidance for planning authorities and developers 2000”, pages 6 and 7, the following guidance is given on the importance of lithic scatters such as we have in the vicinity and possibly in the as yet undisturbed area of the proposed development; -

 

 

“Although scheduling is unlikely in most cases, a lithic scatter will have particular importance if:

 

i)                    Clear boundaries have been identified, making it recognisable

  as a discrete site

  ii)                        The high quality of artefacts recorded from a recent collection episode (eg fresh condition; sharp edges; unusually large quantities of small chips and debitage) suggest buried archaeological deposits have only recently been disturbed; such scatters are more likely to be discrete, and other less durable artefacts such as pottery may be present  

ii)                     Additional evidence (from excavation, geophysical survey or aerial photographs) suggest the presence of buried structural remains with which the artefacts are believed to be associated

iii)                There is evidence for part of the site not having been disturbed at all

iv)                     A scatter has been either dated or interpreted with confidence

v)                          The artefacts recorded suggest diversity within the scatter, whether in terms of repeated occupation over centuries or even millennia (for example where diagnostic artefacts of more than one period are present); or if evidence exists for various tasks having been performed. 

 

   In general terms, sites meeting any three of these criteria are sufficiently rare in England to be considered of National Importance and should be treated accordingly under the terms of planning policy guidance. In view of their national rarity, exceptions will include scatters of Palaeolithic, Mesolithic and Early Neolithic date, for which criterion (v) (above) and one other will be sufficient to demonstrate national importance.”

Some of the known sites in the moorland close by the proposed wind turbine site (March Hill, Readycon Dean) do meet the requirements in the above list whereby they can be considered to be of national importance, taking either nos. (i), (iii) & (v), or (v) and (ii) for Mesolithic scatters. 

 

The proposed wind turbine site, being as yet unexcavated, should as a precautionary principle, be included as part of this whole South Pennine Mesolithic scatter site.  In line with PPG 16, all the South Pennine sites mentioned above should consequently be physically preserved in situ.

 

 

 

Other Guidance to Planners

 

We note that OMBC have written guidance on wind power installations and some relevant paragraphs relating to Archaeology are now quoted:

 

1)     The OMBC Supplementary Guidance Note No 18 on Wind Power has the following paragraph in section 6.19: -

 

"Archaeological remains contain irreplaceable information about our past, and form part of our cultural heritage.   They are also non renewable and vulnerable to damage and destruction. Sensitive management is therefore essential to ensure they survive.  PPG 16 "Archaeology and Planning" gives advice on proposals which may affect archaeological remains. Where nationally important remains and their setting are affected by proposals they should normally be physically preserved."

 

 

 

Oldham MBC adopted the South Pennines Inter-Authority Planning Policy Principles for Wind Power Developments in March 1994 in which it was stated:

 

"The South Pennines Planning Authorities support in principle the use of wind energy for power generation, provided that this does not effect the valued characteristics of the area, its landscape and ecology and its historic and amenity attributes."

 

And

 

"In considering proposed wind power applications, and their access tracks, associated buildings and connections to the National Grid or local users, Planning Authorities will have particular regard to:

 

B) The impact on the historic character and cultural heritage of the area particularly in respect of: -

 

Conservation Areas and Listed Buildings

            sites of archaeological importance."

 Paragraph BE2.7 in the current 1996 adopted Unitary Development Plan, still in force, reads:

 

“The Council will not permit a development proposal where there is evidence to suggest that the site may contain archaeological remains, unless the developer has arranged for the preservation in situ of any remains or, if this is not possible, a comprehensive investigation and recording before the commencement of development.”

 

    Paragraph C 1.12 in the First Deposit Draft U D P 2001 and the para. C 1.12 in the Revised Deposit Draft Plan 2003 both repeat this statement but add another paragraph:

 

Development which would damage significant archaeological remains will only be permitted in cases where it can be demonstrated that the benefits of allowing the development outweigh those of preservation of the remains”

 

Paragraph 12.54 in the Revised Draft Deposit Plan states:

 

        …………………In considering developments, the Council will aim to ensure that neither the monument, archaeological site or its setting will be adversely affected.”

      

          The UK Policy and Planning Guidance Note 16 “Archaeology and Planning” has several relevant paragraphs similar to the above.

 

Paragraph 6 states:-

 

“Archaeological Remains should be seen as a finite, and non-renewable source, in many cases highly fragile and vulnerable to damage and destruction. Appropriate management is therefore essential to ensure they survive in good condition.  In particular care must be taken to ensure that archaeological remains are not needlessly or thoughtlessly destroyed. They can contain irreplaceable information about our past and the potential for an increase in our future knowledge.  They are part of our sense of national identity and are valuable both for their own sake and for their role in education, leisure and tourism.“

 

In the recently published book “Prehistoric Peoples of the Pennines” by Ms. P A Spikins, published by the West Yorkshire Archaeological Service, Ms. Spikins expresses her worries that the remaining Mesolithic Sites on the Pennine moors are being destroyed at an ever increasing rate, partly by overgrazing by sheep and partly by human activities.  She also points out that because of this destruction, the National Trust in the Marsden Moor area adjacent to the proposed wind turbine site has banned any further archaeological excavations.

 

 

 

 

2)       Landscape Value

 

The area of land on which the turbines are proposed to be built has intrinsic preserved relic landscape value quite apart from the archaeological points made above.

 

At the time reservoirs were built in the 1880 to 1891 period, by Oldham Corporation, the whole area of the fields, walls, roadways leading to the farms, the remains of Dowry Castle House and other dwellings, the Public Highway known as Rapes Highway and other features such as the Boxing Hole were frozen in time. The area around the reservoirs was left virtually untouched for over 110 years: no buildings, caravan sites, or any other developments that would affect the water collecting ground were allowed, and as result the landscape is almost exactly as it was in 1890. 

 

In the 1996 Adopted U D P, several paragraphs in sections OE1 and OE2 relate to the continued need to protect open land in the Borough from inappropriate development. 

 

In the Revised Deposit Draft U D Plan, 2003, Section C1, paragraph 2.5 b describes the Borough’s Historic character as being:

 

“..essentially defined by its moorland scenery – the stone built farmsteads and former industrial villages of the Pennine uplands” 

 

Para 12.6  states :-

 

With these points in mind, the Council will make the conservation of the borough’s historic buildings, structures and areas a priority. It will exercise careful and detailed control over new development and pursue suitable opportunities to ensure funding for heritage-led regeneration.”

 

In the same revised Deposit Draft Plan document, in Section OE2.1, relating to Landscape, paragraph 11.77 states:

 

“Insensitively located buildings, telecommunications equipment and wind farms can also adversely affect landscape quality”

 

Again in the same revised Deposit Draft Plan document, Section NR3.1states:

 

“The Council will permit developments which generate energy from renewable sources, where the development, or any ancillary infrastructure or buildings, would not result in an unacceptable impact on:

 

a)         residential/workplace amenity or human health,

b)         the visual amenity of the local area including landscape character,

c)         local natural resources, including air, and water quality,

d)         biodiversity, nature conservation or historical/archaeological interests,

e)         public access to the countryside.

 

Paragraph 13.84 in NR3.3 then states:

 

                        “Wind Turbines and their associated infrastructure, such as access roads, and grid connections, inevitably involve disruption to the ground in the course of construction, especially the foundations required for the turbines themselves. In light of this it is possible

that disruption to sites of archaeological interest could be caused by such developments. Criteria d) of Policy NR3.1 seeks to ensure that historical/archaeological interests are taken into account when applications for such developments are being considered, and additionally any proposal for such a development would be assessed against Policies C1.11, and C1.12 in section 12 of the Plan which relate specifically to sites of archaeological importance.”

 

3)       Environmental Archaeology

 

English Heritage state in their official Guidance paper “ENVIRONMENTAL ARCHAEOLOGY. A guide to the theory and practice of methods, from sampling and recovery to post-excavation” 2002, the following definition:

Environmental Archaeology concerns ecological, social and economic reconstruction. These themes can be examined in relation to changes through time, evidence of specific activities or events and interaction with contemporaneous landscape”.

In the case of the area of Saddleworth under consideration typical situations are: -

Heathlands and upland moors  - environmental remains such as charcoal, charred plant macrofossils, pollen and spores, phyolithics and diatoms can be recovered. These remains will allow radiocarbon dating using the charcoal and analysis of the pollens etc. to throw light on the vegetation history of the area from as far back as c.8000BC.

Peats and organic deposits from wet ditches and upland moors – again it is possible to recover charcoal and charred plant macrofossils to facilitate dating. Other remains that can be recovered are waterlogged plant remains, insect remains, molluscs, bones, ostracods, pollens and spores, diatoms and wood. The recovery of these remains enables information relating to the historic flora and fauna of the area to be collated.

Apart from the above, the information collected enables climatic conditions to be recorded for each archaeological period.

It has been shown that both natural and archaeological palaeoenvironmental deposits can be combined to provide new insights into the impact of humans on the landscape.

Little research relating to Environmental Archaeology has taken place in Saddleworth, the exception being that under-taken by Brayshay in 1998 at High Moor (SD97100624), Castleshaw Moor (SD00451150), Dean Clough (SD98701260), and Castleshaw Roman Fort Vicus (c SD99880965)

It is more than possible that widespread destruction of the Environmental Archaeology will take place within the area of the wind farm if it is allowed to proceed. Turbine and lifting crane foundations, access roads, cable trenches and the general works required, not to mention the random meanderings of heavy machinery onto the area generally will destroy an archaeological landscape that has survived since history began and it has to be preserved for future generations to explore and enjoy.    

The OMBC Supplementary Guidance Note No 18 on Wind Power has a paragraph, 6.18, that recognises the unique character of the peat land sites in OMBC. This paragraph reads:

 

 "Proposals for development affecting peat land sites must be treated with particular care because these sites provide particularly rich, distinctive and increasingly rare habitats. The unique character of peat land depends on the maintenance of waterlogged conditions. The hydrological implications of wind turbine developments may therefore require examination on peat land sites."

 

Longer term destruction will probably take place as a result of the drying out of the peat arising from increased water run-off caused by the trenches, drainage ditches, roadways made for the heavy construction vehicles and the mass concrete foundations that would be built on the sloping sites of the proposed wind turbine area. This would lead to the complete loss of ten thousand years of environmental archaeology, stretching right back to the last ice age.

 

Discussion

 

It is submitted that in the sections that have been quoted above, that the Council’s own written policy statements would lead to a conclusion that planning approval for this wind turbine installation must be refused. 

 

            The Saddleworth Archaeological Trust would also submit that whilst the whole area where this wind turbine proposal is being made, considered at present to be of Regional Archaeological Importance, has such a wide span of archaeological finds, ranging from the end of the Ice Age with the Mesolithic finds, right through the ages to late medieval bloomeries and a preserved Victorian landscape, that the area is approaching a level of National Archaeological Importance.

 

This submission is reinforced by the guidance in the English heritage paper “Managing Lithic Scatters, Archaeological Guidance for planning authorities and developers” because the areas of Mesolithic scatter in the Readycon Dean and March Hill areas, that lie adjacent to the proposed wind turbine site, infer that this whole South Pennine area under discussion is of NATIONAL IMPORTANCE and that the finds should be preserved in situ.  

 

Erection of a group of large 2000KW wind turbines would irrevocably damage the archaeology of the whole area of moorland.   Very large foundations are needed for turbine towers to withstand the bending moment of the wind, 300 tonne concrete pads are needed for the erecting cranes, hard surfaced, deep foundation, access roads would be needed to bring in the heavy machinery and for maintenance, cable trenches, electrical switchgear buildings, drainage ditches and overhead electricity lines on posts would also be necessary.

 

PPG 16 states that if archaeological remains are of National Importance, the presumption should be that they are preserved in situ. 

 

As such, it appears to us that the output of electricity, at 2000 Kilowatts per turbine (maximum output) but reduced by the variation of wind speed over the year to an annual average of only 33%, i.e. 667 Kilowatts per turbine (for an installed cost per turbine of £1.4 Million) does not demonstrate in any way a benefit that outweighs the preservation of these regional or national important remains.  (Para. C1.12 in the OMBC new draft UDPs)

 

                        An additional observation is that the output from one turbine is only slightly more that the output of power from one 44 tonne lorry engine, and the savings in the emissions of greenhouse gases by installing one turbine are insignificant compared to economies in the reduction of energy that could be obtained by, for example, switching carriage of goods in a small number of 44 tonne road vehicles to rail in the UK or by pursuing a vigorous policy of energy conservation across the whole country.

 

 

                        Should planning permission ever be given for this development, then prior to the start of the work, a full archaeological evaluation that would include a large number of test cores, a series of test pits and trial trenches, followed by a series of large scale excavations would need to be carried out at all points where the contracted professional archaeologists designate there to be likely archaeological remains.  Because of the fact that in the land round about the proposed site a large number of important archaeological remains have been discovered, the area of the proposed wind turbine installation is likely, in our view, to produce a large number of archaeological discoveries. This exercise would also need to include a wide-ranging study of the Environmental Archaeology. 

 

The works should be secured by means of a suitable condition, after consultation with the County Archaeologist. (See para. BE 2.7 in the existing OMBC UDP) and the works would include detailed and time-consuming excavation followed by extensive post excavation analysis, report writing and publication.

The cost of, and the time required, for such a prolonged archaeological study could well show that the project is not viable.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Summary

 

In summary the points we have made are:-

 

1) In the area surrounding the proposed wind turbine site and in some cases within the area, there have been a large number of archaeological finds. The University of Manchester Archaeological Unit currently rates these as of regional importance.

 

2) It is likely that other important prehistoric archaeological artefacts lie undisturbed in the proposed wind turbine area and if these were found to contain Mesolithic remains with exceptional elements, the significance for these particular sites could, in the opinion of the University of Manchester Archaeological Unit, raise the importance to a national level.

 

3)  In addition, the criteria for the selection of important remains that are given by English Heritage in their paper “Managing Lithic Scatters, Archaeological Guidance for planning authorities and developers” leads to the argument that because the areas of Mesolithic scatter in the Readycon Dean and March Hill areas, that lie adjacent to the proposed wind turbine site are of National Importance, this infers that this whole South Pennine area of these Mesolithic finds, including the proposed wind turbine site, is of NATIONAL IMPORTANCE and that the finds should be preserved in situ.  

(See the map appended that shows the closeness of the nearby Mesolithic remains.)

 

Several statements in the existing UDP and in the revised UDP have been quoted; extracts are also taken from PPG16, all of which indicate strongly that the whole area should left undisturbed. 

 

In our view this is an overwhelming reason why the proposed wind turbine development         should be refused.

 

4) The area of land of the proposed development has intrinsic preserved landscape value. After the reservoirs were built in the 1880s, the original landscape of Victorian fields, tracks, bridleways and farm walls has been preserved as it was 110 years ago. Again statements in the UDP attach high importance to preserving the visual historic landscape character of the Borough.

 

Quotations from OMBC guidance show that conservation of historic landscapes is a most important consideration and again this is another reason why the proposed wind turbine development should be refused.     

 

5) The heathland and upland peat moor proposed as the site for the development contains a unique record of the climate, the historic flora and fauna, and of the human impact on the landscape as far back as c. 8000 BC. Widespread destruction of the environmental archaeology will take place within the area of the wind farm if it is allowed to proceed.   

 

 

IN CONCLUSION - the moorlands surrounding Saddleworth are very precious to the Metropolitan Borough of Oldham. They are unique in the sense that they contain a microcosm of the history and archaeology of the area, starting when the Ice Age first scoured out the scenery we see today, through the various Stone Ages, the Bronze and Iron Ages, the Roman period with the two forts and the important road connecting the Legionary Fortresses at Chester and York, the Viking and Medieval periods, the Industrial Age with the Standedge Canal and Railway tunnels.

Very few areas of Britain can boast of a continuous history from c.8000 BC to the present time and O.M.B.C. should be thinking more of preserving and promoting, rather than destroying the ‘Jewel in the Crown’.

 

The archaeology contained within Saddleworth is highly regarded by local, regional and national Historians and Archaeologist together with the many visitors to the area who come in search of OMBC’s past and recognise the very special nature of  ‘so much in such a small area’

 

The vast majority of Oldham’s surviving Archaeological Heritage lies within the Saddleworth boundary - destroy this and what is left for future generations?

 

The Saddleworth Archaeological Trust cares passionately about the preservation of our Archaeological Heritage in the Metropolitan Borough of Oldham, and we, as Trustees, would ask that the Borough Planners and all the Council elected representatives please give serious consideration to the observations and opinions in this letter and refuse planning permission.

 

 

 

 

         Yours faithfully,

 

 

 

               

 

 

David Chadderton, Hon Sec. and Trustee,

The Saddleworth Archaeological Trust.

 

 

 

  

 

  

  

  

 


          Trustees :-

 

  Kenneth Booth, FSA Scot.            David Chadderton, BSc (Hons), C Eng, MIChem E           Donald Haigh, MA, FSA