Black Country awarded Unesco geopark status
- Published
The Black Country has been awarded Unesco global geopark status, recognising it as an area of outstanding geological heritage.
Unesco said the area had been recognised due to its cultural heritage and the partnerships committed to conserving, managing and promoting it.
It encompasses sites in Dudley, Wolverhampton, Sandwell and Walsall and becomes the UK's eighth Unesco geopark.
Dudley Council leader Patrick Harley said it was "momentous" for the region.
The role the region played in the Industrial Revolution was at the heart of the bid for status which was backed by partners including Natural England, the Canal and River Trust and the Wildlife Trust For Birmingham and the Black Country.
Mr Harley said: "Our region is renowned for being a driving force during the Industrial Revolution and this status recognises the importance our geological heritage played at the time and how it defined this area. It also marks the start of an exciting new chapter."
More than 40 geosites have so far been selected within the geopark, including Dudley and Wolverhampton Museums, Wren's Nest National Nature Reserve, Sandwell Valley, Red House Glass Cone, Bantock Park and Walsall Arboretum.
Ambassador Matthew Lodge, UK Permanent Delegate to Unesco, Foreign and Commonwealth Office, said the announcement "ensures that this remarkable site will continue to inspire the million people who call the landscape home, as well as local and international visitors in the years to come".
Follow BBC West Midlands on Facebook, external, Twitter, external and Instagram, external. Send your story ideas to: newsonline.westmidlands@bbc.co.uk , external
- Published18 November 2015
- Published7 June 2019