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A fact from Cape Cornwall Mine appeared on Wikipedia's Main Page in the Did you know column on 17 November 2012 (check views). The text of the entry was as follows:
Could this be a slip of the tongue for wine cellars? Since a winery is a place where grapes are grown and wine made, for that to happen on/in former ore-sorting floors of a mine is on the face of it implausible. Awien (talk) 23:00, 29 November 2012 (UTC)[reply]
No, "place where wine is made" is correct. Cornwall has a warm wet climate ideal for grape cultivation, and has a lot of vineyards. An ore-sorting floor isn't "floor" in the sense of "floor of a building", but a big fenced-off area where rubble was piled prior to being picked through (kind of like a present-day scrapyard); once the mine was closed and the rubble cleared away, what was left was a large field with a sturdy stone wall around it, and a lot of long cool tunnels - pretty much the ideal environment for wine-making. The long low walls in the eastern half of this photo are the former vineyards as they appear today. Mogism (talk) 23:11, 29 November 2012 (UTC)[reply]