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Geography Quiz - Quarrying in National Parks (Questions)

This GCSE Geography quiz looks at quarrying in national parks. Building new homes, redevelopment of brownfield sites, civil engineering projects and home owners carrying out DIY creates a high demand for building materials. Many building materials are either quarried directly (e.g. granite, sand and gravel) or made from quarried materials (e.g. cement made from limestone roasted with clay). The problem is that some of these materials are found in or next to some of our national parks which brings industry into conflict with the environment. In your quarrying case study, you will have looked at the impact of quarrying on a national park. Whichever you have studied, the impacts and solutions are the same.

The Yorkshire Dales National Park is an area of great beauty and tourism is an important part of the local economy. Unfortunately, much of the Yorkshire Dales is underlain by limestone, one of the key materials for the construction industry.

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As well as being an essential ingredient in cement manufacture, limestone is used in many other applications - making toothpaste, as a bread improver, in paints, paper, rubber, plastics, as a filter material at sewage works ... the list is long. Quarrying of this resource must be carried out. One of the objections to quarrying is that quarries are unsightly and ruin the appearance of the national park.

To overcome this, quarries will often plant belts of trees to disguise the quarry and to maintain the beauty of the national park. When quarrying is finished, the machinery is removed and the quarry is landscaped to help it to blend back in to the surrounding countryside. The problem with both of these solutions is that they take time to mature. In order to try to remove the disturbance from blasting, earth mounds are built around the quarry edges to deflect noise upwards and away from centres of population. To reduce the air pollution from dust, water sprays are used to 'damp down' dust, containing it within the quarry. Lorries leaving the quarry are washed and covered with a tarpaulin to prevent dust being blown into the air as they drive to their destinations.

The Peak District is another national park which contains limestone. There is a large limestone quarry near to the tourist honeypot of Castleton (Hope quarry). This produces large quantities of limestone that are turned into cement at the Hope cement works, which can be seen from miles away. Despite the usual disadvantages such as dust pollution, lots of heavy lorries on the roads in the area, destruction of wildlife habitat, damage to roads from the passage of the heavy lorries and so on, it continues to be worked. It is a major source of employment, providing jobs directly for several hundred people.

Although quarrying is allowed in national parks, it is carefully regulated. Before a new quarry can be opened, or an existing quarry be extended, planning permission must be granted. In many cases, there will be a public inquiry which can take anything from a few months to several years as both sides produce the reasons why or why not quarrying should take place.

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1. Other than quarrying, which of the following is important to the local economy of a national park?
[ ] Brewing
[ ] Tourism
[ ] ICT
[ ] Steelmaking
2. What attracts people to a national park?
[ ] Scenery and landscape
[ ] Outdoor activities
[ ] Visitor centres
[ ] All of the above
3. What usually happens before a quarry can be opened or extended in a national park?
[ ] The quarry owners must gain planning permission
[ ] Nothing, there are no restrictions to quarrying
[ ] The prime minister of the UK must sign a document authorising the quarry
[ ] Trees need to be planted
4. Which of the following would help to reduce the impact of a quarry on a national park?
[ ] Working the quarry only at night
[ ] Building a new railway line to transport the quarried products
[ ] Restricting the size of the quarry and the working hours
[ ] All of the above
5. In the Cotswolds, a gravel quarry has been turned into a series of lakes and a wildlife reserve. Doing this to a quarry is called...
[ ] reworking
[ ] reservation
[ ] remaking
[ ] restoration
6. Which of the following statements is incorrect?
[ ] Quarrying in a national park is sustainable
[ ] Quarries provide employment in national parks
[ ] Quarries in national parks can be screened by planting trees
[ ] The passage of many lorries every day damages the roads in national parks
7. Which rock is quarried in the Peak District and Yorkshire Dales National Parks?
[ ] Chalk
[ ] Limestone
[ ] Granite
[ ] Slate
8. As well as national parks, quarries are sometimes opened near to sites of special scientific interest (SSSIs). What is an SSSI?
[ ] An artificially-constructed nature reserve
[ ] A field studies centre that specialises in the study of science
[ ] An area that is legally protected by law because of the wildlife or geology found there
[ ] A place set aside for secret research by the government
9. When a quarry has been exhausted, it can be used as...
[ ] a place to build a tourist attraction
[ ] a place for water sports
[ ] a wildlife reserve
[ ] all of the above
10. Why might local residents in a national park be unhappy about the closure of a quarry?
[ ] Fewer tourists will visit the area to look at the quarry
[ ] The roads will no longer be swept by the local authority
[ ] There will be less employment
[ ] House prices will be halved
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Geography Quiz - Quarrying in National Parks (Answers)
1. Other than quarrying, which of the following is important to the local economy of a national park?
[ ] Brewing
[x] Tourism
[ ] ICT
[ ] Steelmaking
Many businesses in national parks are geared up to make their profits from tourists
2. What attracts people to a national park?
[ ] Scenery and landscape
[ ] Outdoor activities
[ ] Visitor centres
[x] All of the above
There are two types of visitor to national parks - day trippers and holidaymakers
3. What usually happens before a quarry can be opened or extended in a national park?
[x] The quarry owners must gain planning permission
[ ] Nothing, there are no restrictions to quarrying
[ ] The prime minister of the UK must sign a document authorising the quarry
[ ] Trees need to be planted
Quarrying provides income to local councils through taxation
4. Which of the following would help to reduce the impact of a quarry on a national park?
[ ] Working the quarry only at night
[ ] Building a new railway line to transport the quarried products
[x] Restricting the size of the quarry and the working hours
[ ] All of the above
Working the quarry at night would be more disturbing to local residents and probably the wildlife. Transport by rail is a better solution than road, but for large quarries only. The railway construction work would damage the national park
5. In the Cotswolds, a gravel quarry has been turned into a series of lakes and a wildlife reserve. Doing this to a quarry is called...
[ ] reworking
[ ] reservation
[ ] remaking
[x] restoration
Restoration can be carried out to parts of a working quarry that are no longer in use or when a quarry has reached the end of its useful life
6. Which of the following statements is incorrect?
[x] Quarrying in a national park is sustainable
[ ] Quarries provide employment in national parks
[ ] Quarries in national parks can be screened by planting trees
[ ] The passage of many lorries every day damages the roads in national parks
No quarrying of rock is sustainable as it takes millions of years for rocks and minerals to form
7. Which rock is quarried in the Peak District and Yorkshire Dales National Parks?
[ ] Chalk
[x] Limestone
[ ] Granite
[ ] Slate
There are other rock types in the parks but the main rock quarried is limestone
8. As well as national parks, quarries are sometimes opened near to sites of special scientific interest (SSSIs). What is an SSSI?
[ ] An artificially-constructed nature reserve
[ ] A field studies centre that specialises in the study of science
[x] An area that is legally protected by law because of the wildlife or geology found there
[ ] A place set aside for secret research by the government
Sites of special scientific interest can be set up anywhere, they are not just found in national parks
9. When a quarry has been exhausted, it can be used as...
[ ] a place to build a tourist attraction
[ ] a place for water sports
[ ] a wildlife reserve
[x] all of the above
There are examples of all of these - the tourist attraction of the Eden Project has been built in a quarry in Cornwall and the Cotswold Water Park has been created from worked-out gravel pits to provide lakes for water sports and wildlife
10. Why might local residents in a national park be unhappy about the closure of a quarry?
[ ] Fewer tourists will visit the area to look at the quarry
[ ] The roads will no longer be swept by the local authority
[x] There will be less employment
[ ] House prices will be halved
There is usually not much industry in a national park as they are mainly rural areas, so if a quarry is closed, more people will be unemployed and have to commute to find work