In 2006, UNESCO designated Cornwall & West Devon Mining Landscape a World Heritage Site. In the eighteenth century, Cornwall was one of the country`s principal industrial areas. Before the late 1870s, it produced more tin than any other region in the world, & in the early nineteenth century its output of copper was two-thirds of world production. The remains of the mines contribute to a distinctive cultural landscape; more than 200 engine houses survive
- the largest concentration of such monuments in the world. This book, & its companion Cornish Mines: St Just to Redruth, is a guide to the best examples of the surviving mines, with stunning photographs & authoritative text.