Site overview

The Malacate (São Domingos) is a surviving industrial structure forming part of the extensive former copper-pyrite mining complex of the Mina de São Domingos, located at the hamlet of Mina de São Domingos in the parish of Corte do Pinto, municipality of Mértola, district of Beja. The mine lies within the Iberian Pyrite Belt, one of Europe's principal metallogenic provinces. The Malacate, specifically known as Poço Malacate nº 6, was built of iron and timber and served to drain groundwater from the 150-metre level of the open-pit workings, operating through a large electric turbine that raised water in enormous buckets to a surface reservoir.

Modern mining at São Domingos was conducted by the British firm Mason & Barry from 1858 until 1966, during which period over 20 million tonnes of ore were extracted. Following closure the complex fell into ruin, but has since been partially preserved as a Conjunto de Interesse Público since 2013 and is managed by the Fundação Serrão Martins. The Malacate forms part of the Industrial Circuit visitor route now promoted at the site.

The malacate stands in the open and arid post-industrial landscape of São Domingos, where surviving structures are widely dispersed but still read clearly within the former mining field.

Map

Map markers and directions links are provided for location reference only and do not indicate public access or permission to enter a site.
No site photograph is currently available. Images will be added as field visits are carried out.

History

The deposit at Mina de São Domingos was exploited from at least the Bronze Age and subsequently by Phoenician, Carthaginian, Roman, and Islamic workings, though the modern industrial significance of the site dates from the mid-nineteenth century. The first registration of the modern concession was made in June 1854 in the name of Nicolau Biava, acting on behalf of the French mining entrepreneur Ernest Deligny. In March 1855 the rights were transferred to Deligny and partners, who established the company La Sabina to exploit the Portuguese pyrite deposits.

In May 1858 La Sabina leased the working of the mine to the British firm Mason & Barry, which would go on to extract ore from São Domingos for over a century. The deposit is a single mass of copper-bearing pyrite distributed between the surface and 420 metres depth, with average grades of approximately 1.25% copper, 1% lead, 2% zinc, and 45–48% sulphur, alongside iron and arsenic. Principal commodities extracted during the modern period were copper and sulphur.

The ore was processed at the Achada do Gamo complex and the Moitinha crushing centre, and transported by one of Portugal's first private railways to the river port at Pomarão on the Guadiana, from where it was shipped abroad. The mine was the largest mining operation in Portugal until the 1930s, employing a continuous workforce of over 1,000 workers through much of its active life. The complex included infrastructure well beyond that typical of Portuguese industrial sites of the period: a hospital, a theatre, a church, a Protestant cemetery, workshops where locomotives were built and maintained, and a power station that became the first in the Alentejo region.

The Malacate — Poço Malacate nº 6 — was a dewatering shaft structure of iron and timber construction. Its function was to drain water from the 150-metre level of the corta (the open-pit workings), keeping the excavation sufficiently dry for continued extraction. Water was raised from depth in large buckets driven by a powerful electric turbine in a balanced reciprocating motion, then channelled into a surface reservoir from which it flowed by canal to the Moitinha crushing centre and the Achada do Gamo metallurgical complex.

The structure's name derives from the Spanish and Portuguese term malacate, broadly denoting a whim or hoisting device historically powered by animal or mechanical means. Mason & Barry's operations continued until 1966, when ore extraction ceased. The company declared bankruptcy in June 1968, with debts to workers and the social security system.

La Sabina, which had maintained a landlord relationship with Mason & Barry since the nineteenth century, recovered the property under the terms of their lease. The mining concession of São Domingos expired in 1984. Following closure the entire complex entered a prolonged period of abandonment and environmental deterioration; the ore extraction left significant acidic drainage affecting the surrounding landscape and watercourses.

In 2004 the Câmara Municipal de Mértola and La Sabina established the Fundação Serrão Martins as a non-profit body to conserve, valorise, and promote the heritage of the Mina de São Domingos and support local development. In the same year a monument to the miners was inaugurated in the village. On 3 June 2013 the mining complex of the Mina de São Domingos was classified as a Conjunto de Interesse Público under Portuguese law.

A state environmental remediation programme coordinated by the Empresa de Desenvolvimento Mineiro began in 2016, budgeted at approximately 20 million euros with European Community funding, covering drainage control, waste confinement, acid water treatment, and eventual heritage and tourism valorisation. The Malacate now forms a stop on the Industrial Circuit visitor route at the site, alongside the Corta da Mina, Cais do Minério, the railway workshops, Moitinha station, and the Achada do Gamo complex. In 2021 the Malacate also gave its name to a multidisciplinary arts residency project, funded under the European Economic Area agreement, organised at the Mina de São Domingos.

In 2023 a group of German investors acquired the land of the former complex with plans to develop solar, wind, and green hydrogen energy installations.

Timeline

1854
Exploration

Modern concession registered; discovery recorded

In June 1854 the modern concession for the Mina de São Domingos was registered at the Câmara Municipal de Mértola in the name of Nicolau Biava, acting on behalf of Ernest Deligny. Biava, an Italian mining engineer then working at Tharsis in Spain, identified the pyrite deposit.
1855–1858
Legislation

La Sabina established; concession leased to Mason & Barry

In 1855 Deligny and partners registered La Sabina in Seville to exploit the Portuguese pyrite deposits. In May 1858, once the Portuguese state concession was obtained, La Sabina leased the working of the mine to the British firm Mason & Barry.
1858–1966
Operation

Mason & Barry extraction: over 20 million tonnes of ore

Under Mason & Barry's management, the Mina de São Domingos operated for over a century, extracting more than 20 million tonnes of copper-bearing pyrite ore. The mine was the largest mining operation in Portugal until the 1930s and maintained a continuous workforce of over 1,000 workers. Principal products were copper and sulphur.
1966
Closure

Cessation of ore extraction

In 1966 ore extraction at the Mina de São Domingos ceased after more than a century of intensive operation by Mason & Barry.
1968
Closure

Mason & Barry bankruptcy declared

In June 1968 Mason & Barry declared bankruptcy with debts to workers and the social security system. La Sabina recovered the property under the terms of the long-standing lease between the two companies.
1984
Closure

Mining concession expires

The mining concession of the Mina de São Domingos expired in 1984, formally ending any legal basis for resumed extraction.
2004
Heritage

Fundação Serrão Martins established

In 2004 the Câmara Municipal de Mértola and La Sabina established the Fundação Serrão Martins as a non-profit body to conserve and valorise the heritage of the Mina de São Domingos and promote local development. A monument to the miners was also inaugurated in the village in April 2004.
2013
Heritage

Classified as Conjunto de Interesse Público

On 3 June 2013 the mining complex of the Mina de São Domingos was classified as a Conjunto de Interesse Público under Portuguese heritage law, formalising legal protection of the surviving structures including the Malacate.
2016
Redevelopment

State environmental remediation programme begins

A state environmental remediation programme coordinated by the Empresa de Desenvolvimento Mineiro commenced in 2016, budgeted at approximately 20 million euros with European Community support. The programme covered drainage control, waste confinement, acid water treatment, and eventual heritage and tourism valorisation of the former mining area.

Sources and records

Portuguese Wikipedia article: Mina de São Domingos
Fundação Serrão Martins official website: history section and Malacate page
Visit Mértola tourism website: Mina de S. Domingos, Património Mineiro
Rostos da Aldeia feature, January 2025: Histórias e memórias de uma aldeia que foi mineira
Lugaresincertos.com travel feature: Visitar a Mina de São Domingos
Junta de Freguesia de Corte do Pinto official website: parish history
Mindat.org locality record: São Domingos Mine, Corte do Pinto, Mértola, Beja, Portugal
Rádio Voz da Planície, December 2021: Projeto Malacate announcement
Revista Saúda: História da mina de São Domingos
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