Stoke Lane Slocker

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Stoke_Lane_Slocker an entity of type: Thing

Stoke Lane Slocker (grid reference ST66874745) is a cave near Stoke St Michael, in the Carboniferous Limestone of the Mendip Hills, in the English county of Somerset. It is 2.18 km in length and reaches a depth of 30m. It was previously known as Stoke Lane Swallet, but now the local name is preferred. The origin of the word "Slocker" is obscure, possibly from "slock" meaning to entice or lure away although the Gaelic word for swallow hole is "sluighaire". rdf:langString
rdf:langString Stoke Lane Slocker
rdf:langString Stoke Lane Slocker
rdf:langString Stoke Lane Slocker
xsd:float 51.22526931762695
xsd:float -2.475810050964355
xsd:integer 9575563
xsd:integer 1082185599
rdf:langString 30m
<kilometre> 2.18
rdf:langString Stoke Lane Slocker entrance.jpg
rdf:langString Entrance
xsd:string 51.22527 -2.47581
rdf:langString Stoke Lane Slocker (grid reference ST66874745) is a cave near Stoke St Michael, in the Carboniferous Limestone of the Mendip Hills, in the English county of Somerset. It is 2.18 km in length and reaches a depth of 30m. It was previously known as Stoke Lane Swallet, but now the local name is preferred. The origin of the word "Slocker" is obscure, possibly from "slock" meaning to entice or lure away although the Gaelic word for swallow hole is "sluighaire".
rdf:langString Limestone
xsd:double 30.0
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 5568
xsd:double 2180.0
<Geometry> POINT(-2.4758100509644 51.225269317627)

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