Three
Spaghetti Junction was built over a river. At a shallow and gravelly point, this river was traversed and was called Scræfford: probably the crossing (ford) by the caves (scræf). This name was then mangled over the centuries to become Salford. Today, the Salford Junction is an Interchange of canals splaying out into four possible routes. The caves destroyed. They had possible been formed naturally by an old route of the river but, if so, they were later enlarged by human hands.
Other such cave sites were sacred entrances to the Otherworld. Sometimes otherworldly beings flowed from the caves, and at other times offerings could be left to those beings. Perhaps Salford's caves were a kind of Wëoh, a shrine for travellers leaving objects in exchange for a safe journey. Perhaps. We don't know how old the caves were, but they first were mentioned in the 1400s.
Today, the curved spaghetti roads rest on their concrete megaliths to form cavernous realms, from which the old beings might still be communed with.
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~ Interchange ~