Dog Hole Cave
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Dog_Hole_Cave an entity of type: Thing
Dog Hole Cave is an archaeologically significant cave near Storth, Cumbria, England. Other names for the cave include Haverbrack Bank Pot, Haverbrack Dog Hole, Fairy Cave, The Dog Hole, and Doghole Cave. It consists of a largely excavated 12 metres (39 ft) shaft formed in Carboniferous limestone with 6 metres (20 ft) of steeply dipping phreatic tube at the bottom. Radio carbon dating of the deposits have provided dates ranging from Romano-British to Early Medieval.
rdf:langString
rdf:langString
Dog Hole Cave
rdf:langString
Dog Hole
rdf:langString
Dog Hole
xsd:float
54.21490859985352
xsd:float
-2.794287919998169
xsd:integer
33429525
xsd:integer
1085064369
rdf:langString
Storth, Cumbria, England
rdf:langString
Showing location of Dog Hole in Cumbria
rdf:langString
Haverbrack Bank Pot
rdf:langString
File:The Dog Hole.jpg
rdf:langString
The cave entrance in January 2010
xsd:string
54.21491 -2.794288
rdf:langString
Dog Hole Cave is an archaeologically significant cave near Storth, Cumbria, England. Other names for the cave include Haverbrack Bank Pot, Haverbrack Dog Hole, Fairy Cave, The Dog Hole, and Doghole Cave. It consists of a largely excavated 12 metres (39 ft) shaft formed in Carboniferous limestone with 6 metres (20 ft) of steeply dipping phreatic tube at the bottom. It was originally excavated by J. W. ("Wilfred") Jackson in 1912. Further excavation was carried out by local scouts in the 1950s, and by researchers from Liverpool John Moores University in 2003, and in 2009 it was reported that "subsequent renewed caving activity has revealed more archaeology". Jackson found domestic animal bones (dogs, pigs) some of which are in the Natural History Museum, and the scouts also found human bones. The cave was gated in the 1980s to protect the archaeology, but inspection in 2003 showed that this had been destroyed. Radio carbon dating of the deposits have provided dates ranging from Romano-British to Early Medieval.
rdf:langString
II
xsd:integer
1
rdf:langString
Carboniferous limestone
rdf:langString
SD 4826 8019
xsd:integer
240
xsd:double
12.0
xsd:nonNegativeInteger
4345
xsd:double
6.0
<Geometry>
POINT(-2.7942879199982 54.214908599854)