Part I. Introductory
1. The background to the Alderley Edge Landscape Project - A. J. N.
W. Prag
2. Approach to the Edge: a personal view - Alan Garner
Part II. The bedrock of the Edge - geology and geography
3. The geological story of Alderley Edge - David B. Thompson and
Simon Timberlake
4. Rocks, minerals and landforms: an overview - Simon
Timberlake
5. The solid geology of Alderley Edge - David B. Thompson, Geoffrey
Warrington, John E. Pollard and John R. Nudds
6. The minerals of the Edge - David I. Green, Richard S.W.
Braithwaite, David B. Thompson and Geoffrey Warrington
7. Geomorphology: The evolution of the landscape - Richard H.
Johnson and David B. Thompson
Part III. Natural history - the flora and fauna
8. The natural history of Alderley: an introduction - A.J.N.W. Prag
with Sean R. Edwards, Simon Timberlake and Lawrence Cook
9. The vegetation of the Edge - Sean R. Edwards, Simon Timberlake
and Jonathan Guest
10. The trees of Alderley Edge - Simon Timberlake and Sean R.
Edwards
11. The birds of Alderley Edge - Jonathan Guest, M.V. Hounsome and
Edward Stanley with John Adams, Alan Straw and Henry McGhie
12. Alderley Edge pondlife - Jonathan Guest and Jill Smethurst
13. The insects and other invertebrates of Alderley Edge - Dmitri
V. Logunov and Roger L. H. Dennis
Part IV. Human history - archaeology and underground
14. The archaeology of Alderley Edge - A. J. N. W. Prag and Simon
Timberlake
15. Early mining: the evidence before 1598 - Simon Timberlake
16. Mining in the Alderley district: the documented period -
Geoffrey Warrington
17. Working the mines at Alderley Edge: a contemporary perspective
- Nigel Dibben
18. The quarries of Alderley Edge - Nigel Dibben (based on an
original text by Simon Timberlake, Tom Burke and Clare Pye)
Part V. Human history - overground: the social history
19. The history of Alderley Edge - Clare Pye
20. The Archive - Jean Wearne
21. Living memory: the people of the Edge - John L. Ecclestone
22. The graffiti on stone and wood - Carolanne King, Clare Pye,
Nigel Dibben, Simon Timberlake and Alan Garner
23. Alderley Edge: the villas and the village - Matthew Hyde
24. The Stanley Estate - Matthew Hyde
25. Nether Alderley mill: a historical and architectural study -
Mike Redfern
26. Crossing the Edge - Clare Pye with Simon Timberlake and
Carolanne King
27. Round the ragged edge: recumbent rocks and standing stones -
Jeremy Milln and John Adams
28. Alderley: the names of street, house and field - J. S.
Adams
Part VI. Looking back, looking forward
29. Close to the Edge - ensuring the future of the Edge for
everyone - Christopher Widger
30. By Seven Firs and Goldenstone: an account of the Legend of
Alderley - Alan Garner
31. Envoi - A. J. N. W. Prag
Appendices
Glossaries
References
Index - Compiled by Simon Timberlake -- .
A. J. N. W. Prag is Honorary Professor at the Manchester Museum and Professor Emeritus of Classics at the University of Manchester
'John Prag, who has given so much of his life to the Alderley Edge
Landscape Project, says that the driver for setting up the project
in 1995 was to collect as much information as possible for the
National Trust to compile a proper management plan for the site,
balancing the need to protect the 'essential magic' of the Edge
with sustainable access. That is why the project and its
accompanying book are so comprehensive in scope, with chapters on
the geology, pond life and trees, birds and invertebrates - no
other village has received such an extensive and in-depth study.
'
Chris Catling, Current Archaeology, June 2016
'If you ever wanted to know about Alderley Edge in Cheshire, UK,
start here. It is a special place within easy reach from
Macclesfield and Manchester, and much used for quiet recreation by
people who live on the surrounding plain. Now those with a keen
interest in the place have a huge reservoir of information at their
fingertips. The book's scope is broad, with 34 listed contributors
including Alan Garner, who introduces Alderley Edge and ends by
telling the legend of Alderley and more modern tales. The authors
cover geology, geomorphology and mineralogy; natural history;
archaeology, including early mining, historic mining and quarries;
local and social history, including archive sources, oral history,
graffiti, the Stanley Estate, villas, village and mill, route-ways,
boundary and other stones, and place-names; and conservation and
the National Trust, including management, and threats and
opportunities for the future. Given the size of this tome it is
reasonably priced and the quality of publication and illustration
are good throughout.'
John Barnatt, Peak District National Park Authority, Landscapes
'The full value of this major work lies not only in its specialist
interest to mining historians but its broader coverage of the
history and environment of the Cheshire locality ranging, for
example, from the Wizard legend to second world war graffiti on
trees, and from mediaeval standing stones to Victorian mill-owners'
villas. It may be an unworthy thought but at the last resort, the
book might even be a suitable replacement for the door stops for
which Alderley Edge Bronze Age hammer-stones were, it is said,
traditionally used.'
Nigel J Dribben, Derbyshire Caving Club, Peak District Mines
Historical Society
'There can be no doubt that this is a comprehensive synthesis of
what is known of the Alderley Edge invertebrate fauna. The
extensive checklists are the first to be compiled for this
locality. This work provides a baseline for future research and
highlights areas that are likely to be extremely productive in
terms of new records. If you don't want to collect, then just go
and observe. As the authors note, plenty of the species recorded
are known only by their name, with very little (if any) information
known about their general biology, feeding or mating habits. There
are calls throughout the chapter to take up the challenge of adding
to our knowledge of various aspects of this fauna and I encourage
you to do so. Reading this book certainly got my bug
net-twitching!'
Dr David Penney, Faculty of Life Sciences, University of
Manchester, UK, Antenna 2016:40 (3)
'Many of the approaches and techniques used were ground-breaking at
the time. The Story of Alderley ranges from the discovery of two
new species of bramble to a retelling of the legend by Alan Garner
that takes the story back into prehistory - and his shovel was
radiocarbon-dated to the Bronze Age. No other project of book has
covered the entire, complex story of a single village and its
landscape in such detail. It will be read not just by landscape
historians but by students and scholars in all those disciplines
and at all levels, and by anyone interested in any aspect of
history and of the countryside, whether out on the Edge or in the
comfort of an armchair.'
The Society of Antiquaries
'The Alderley Edge Landscape Project (AELP) began, we are told,
with a 'shovel, a singer of tales and an archaeologist'. From this
curious, and rather romantic, origin comes a work of daunting
scholarship by no fewer than 34 contributors across an equally
daunting range of discipline. Result: a record, a reference but
also a deeply inspiring detective story.
Oral history transcripts add local voices. Chapters are richly
provided with enough photographs past and present, line drawings,
maps, town plans, tables, technical diagrams and genealogies to
spur on any casual reader to keep exploring.
Several glossaries and a truly comprehensive index are extremely
helpful. The Alderley story told here represents several decades of
an ambitious and innovative landscape study. Certainly what comes
across is how many different facets of research must blend to
understand the life of a long-inhabited community.'
Julie Elizabeth Smalley, Cheshire Landscape History Today
'.and it is only now, with the production of the massive, and
massively valuable and readable, The story of Alderley, that we can
get the big picture laid out in all of its glory. And glorious is
an apt term for this piece of work. Its 984 pages are made up into
six main sections of 31 chapters, 13 appendices, three glossaries
of terms (25 pages), a reference list (17 pages) and a
comprehensive index (32 pages).
Look at the number of pages, and the price, and order a copy. It
will keep you in the most fascinating reading for weeks on end. And
a word on the production of the book by Manchester University Press
- hardback and flawless, an example to all publishers.'
Graham Proudlove, Cave and Karst Science Review
'The AELP was a multidisciplinary study of the core area of the
National Trust property on the Edge and the hinterland of Over
Alderley, Nether Alderley and Alderley Edge village. This was
headed by the National Trust, Manchester Museum and the University
of Manchester. The project leader Dr A.J.N.W. Prag, formerly Keeper
and Professor of Archaeology in the Manchester Museum, was joined
by more than 30 researchers in geology, mineralogy, geomorphology,
botany, ornithology, entomology, archaeology, mining history, human
history, social history, archive history, local history and
folklore. The experts contribute 31 chapters and 13 appendices to
this comprehensive volume. It can, perhaps justly, claim to be the
most complete account of the local landscape and the history of its
community in this region!
This book is truly a landmark in our knowledge and understanding of
this popular natural feature and its environmental, historical and
social contexts. It is a must for any lover the Edge or frequent
visitor - above ground or below!'
MGA Newsletter 8th March 2016
'Whilst firmly focused on the Cheshire settlement of Alderley and
its eponymous sandstone Edge, this monumental tome records journeys
of discovery, adventure and understanding which deserve a much
wider readership.'
Paul Belford, Industrial Archaeology Review, Vol 38, 2016 - Issue
2
'It is impossible not to admire the drive and energy which has seen
this project through to publication in this well-produced volume,
and within its pages every reader will find something of
interest.'
Bob Silvester , University of Chester , Landscape History Vol. 38,
No. 1, 2017 -- .
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