Man versus Nature
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Man versus Nature

Nature's Tea Chests;
In the 18th and 19th centuries the masons of the day had built their pier and sea walls in much the same way as later and present masons,
with large stone laid with flat beds, raking surfaces.
Granite and other local rock has differing coefficients of abrasion and loss. The effect is that over the years, pockets develop,

which allow a greater purchase and a ball pressure to be applied. Eventually, joints weaken and local bond goes.
When a stone breaks free, it then becomes a battering ram held in the grip of the waves.
The effect in 1817 is the same as now. Here are two pictures separated by two weeks.
The upper one shows the loss on the secondary wall, three of the stones are left on the shingle, others have migrated.
The lower picture shows the corner of the lower section completely broken away,
and just two new stones can be seen, one of the older breaks has been moved.
Where the other stones are, is anyone's guess. All of this despite the best of attempts to rod the stones together.
In the battle between Man and Nature, I know who to place my money on every time.
In 1817, the sea lifted stone blocks of a ton as if they were tea chests.
The side effect of creating an anti-curve to the sea wall to prevent wave encroachment on the road,
is that it increases the pressure on the lower section of the wall section, and increases the spread and backwash effect on the foreshore.

Raymond Forward
A lot of the bars are bright ribbed stainless steel, so this was not repaired that long ago ... in fact I thought that I saw it last year, not sure. The other point is that that is why lighthouses stand. They are not rigidly constructed. They bend with the force of wind and sea. The forces are not contained (as hydraulically they are as they reach coastal restrictions).
 
Right, I ve paid my money I want it repaired now! So, it is Penwith, soon to be Cornwall Unitary OneCornwall Council, or whatever it will be called.
 
Funding is depleted by factors other than basic necessities, unfortunately; Brief summary of the prom ...
The Esplanade, walking peacefully, ladies and gentlefolk, for the use thereof, was built in 1843; now named The Promenade.
It was changed with landing levels, and groynes, under-pinning walls etc, following the Great 1880 storm and further damage in the massive storm of 1895. This because the original wall was built as facing to the dunes which had stood there for centuries, and that the foreshore beach which had been replenished by those dunes was then depleting (for some 40 years), the wall was undercut and the pressure of the sea forces had increased as it was hitting the higher wall. Though modern Penzance has seen some violent storms, including 1962 and 2004/5, we have not seen something to replicate that storm of 1817, nor has it experienced anything which replicates the events of 1755, both of which are quite possible and even likely, despite the number crunching statistics. Percentage likelihoods still accept the probability that they will eventually happen. The final answer as to our Promenade will either be in the hands of Nature, or it will have to be entirely re-built before Nature takes a hand.
 

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