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Feb 28, 2022 · Cornwall's Red River. Poet John Wedgwood Clarke explores the Red River in Cornwall. Despite being heavily polluted by centuries of tin mining, it is also home to some rare, beautiful and...
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Feb 22, 2022 · The Red River in West Cornwall runs from Neolithic standing stones on the moors above Camborne to Gwithian in St Ives Bay and has been described as the most ‘unnatural’ or ‘modified’ in the UK— all of its seven miles has been altered by tin-mining.
The Red River is steeped in history and character, from its source near Bolenowe, through the mining heartlands of Brea and Tuckingmill right through to the coast at...
Feb 23, 2022 · The Red River runs from Neolithic standing stones on the moors above Camborne to Gwithian on St Ives Bay and has been described as the most "unnatural" or "modified" such...
- Olivier Vergnault
Easy. Distance: 5.5 miles. First trace the modest Red River, which flows through tranquil woods and past industrial heritage south of Portreath. Then, follow a spectacular section of the Coastal Footpath National Trail with breathtaking views and the chance of seeing choughs.
The Red River is a small river, about eight miles long, in north-western Cornwall which issues into St Ives Bay at Godrevy on Cornwall's Atlantic coast. The river gets its name from the mineral deposits associated with tin mining which formerly coloured its water red.
The Red River comprises a sequence of 50 photographs that follows a small stream in the West of Cornwall from its source to the sea. It travels from moorland, through areas of small scale farming, tin mining and urban communities to the tourist beaches on the coast.