Site overview
The magnesite mine near Gornoslav village, Asenovgrad Municipality, Plovdiv Province, occupies an ultrabasite massif in the north-easternmost reaches of the Western Rhodopes. According to Bulgarian sources, the Gornoslav deposit holds the distinction of being the only magnesite (MgCO3) occurrence of industrial significance in Bulgaria. Exploitation of the deposit commenced in 1956 and continued until 1972, when operations ceased.
The host geology was described in a 1963 Bulgarian geological study as an allometamorphic and supergene-altered ultrabasite body. No information has been found in the consulted sources regarding surviving surface structures, subsequent reuse of the site, or heritage designation. The mine appears to have remained closed since 1972.
Map
History
The magnesite deposit at Gornoslav village, situated in the foothills of the Dobrostanska Ridge at the north-eastern edge of the Western Rhodopes, was recognised as Bulgaria's sole industrially significant magnesite (magnesium carbonate, MgCO3) occurrence. The host rock is an ultrabasite massif, whose allometamorphic and supergene alteration characteristics were studied and published by Bulgarian geologists Trashliev and Stanisheva in 1963 in the Travaux sur la géologie de Bulgarie series. This published study identified the ultrabasite body in the Plovdiv district and described the metamorphic and supergene transformations that gave rise to the magnesite mineralisation.
Systematic mining of the deposit began in 1956 under Bulgaria's state-managed mineral extraction programme, in a period during which Soviet-assisted geological survey work was expanding the exploitation of previously identified but understudied deposits across the country. The Gornoslav magnesite mine operated for approximately sixteen years. Operations ceased in 1972, after which no further extraction is recorded in the consulted sources. The reasons for closure have not been found in the available record, though the relatively short operational life suggests that the accessible reserves were exhausted or that the deposit proved economically marginal at the scale achievable.
No information has been identified in the consulted sources regarding the nature or survival of any surface structures associated with the mine, its post-closure treatment, or any heritage designation. The village of Gornoslav itself had a small population (recorded at 86–87 residents in the 2010s–2020s) and the area is primarily agricultural and forested. A reservoir on the Sushitsa river, completed in 1969, is located within the village territory. The mine site's current physical condition is not documented in the consulted sources.
Timeline
Magnesite mining ceases
Magnesite extraction commences
Sources and records
Asenovgrad Municipality official website — entry on Gornoslav village
Trashliev, S., Stanisheva, G. (1963): Allometamorphic and supergene changes of the ultrabasite massif at Gornoslav village, Plovdiv district — Travaux sur la géologie de Bulgarie, ser. Geochem., Mineral., Petrogr., 4, 259–295
Po4ivka.net gazetteer entry on Gornoslav
Guide-Bulgaria.com directory entry on Gornoslav village