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submitted 1 day ago by GreyShuck@feddit.uk to c/nature@feddit.uk

At first, the small purple flowers are hard to spot in the weak May sunshine. Slowly the drifts of delicate mountain pansies, along with the white rosettes of alpine pennycress, begin to jump out, scattered across an area little bigger than a football pitch, on the banks of the River Allen in Northumberland.

This is a pocket of calaminarian grassland, an increasingly rare habitat where specialist plants called metallophytes have adapted to live in soils deeply contaminated by heavy metals, the legacy of more than 1,000 years of lead mining.

“This is absolutely a case of nature responding to pollution caused by humans,” says Geoff Dobbins, estates manager for the Northumberland Wildlife Trust, who is passionate about saving these grasslands.

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[-] Mpatch@lemmy.world 1 points 1 day ago

. Great so now the bees gona pollinate the lead flowers to make lead honey. To make lead stuned children.

this post was submitted on 28 May 2026
7 points (100.0% liked)

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