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Lindow Moss

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Lindow moss


Lindow Moss, also known as Saltersley Common, is a raised mire peat bog on the edge of Wilmslow in Cheshire, England. It has been used as common land since the medieval period and is best known for the discovery of the preserved bog body of Lindow Man in 1984.

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Lindow Moss Lindow Moss Website Photo gallery

The peat bog was formed in a collection of hollows left by melting ice at the end of the last ice age. The first written record of Lindow Moss was in 1421 when the lord of Mobberley and Wilmslow allowed people to dig peat from the mossland for use as fuel. It originally covered over 600 hectares (1,500 acres), but has since shrunk to a tenth of its original size. The bog can be a dangerous place; an 18th-century writer recorded people drowning there.

Lindow Moss Lindow Moss Website Maps and aerial photos

For centuries, peat from the bog was used as fuel. It continues to be extracted but now for mixing within compost products. The process is now mechanised with a mechanical digger.

Lindow Moss Lindow Moss Roger Gittins ccbysa20 Geograph Britain and Ireland

The site is known for its flora and fauna such as hare's-tail cottongrass, common cottongrass and green hairstreak butterfly. It also has been a habitat for water voles although their continued existence is threatened by sinking water levels. The Saltersley Common Preservation Society promotes the preservation of the moss. In November 2011, they teamed up with a local amateur filmmaker to produce a short video detailing the history of the bog and some of the threats it faces.

Lindow Moss Wilmslow Lindow Moss amp Lindow Man

Lindow moss in the 1960s


Lindow Moss Lindow Moss Website Photo gallery

Lindow Moss Lindow Woman Mapionet

Lindow Moss Lindow Moss YouTube

References

Lindow Moss Wikipedia