Chaos as tyre lorry overturns near M6
[gallery] An articulated lorry carrying tyres overturned near the M6, trapping and injuring the driver and causing delays for motorists.

The vehicle overturned on the roundabout just off the M6 at junction seven for Great Barr yesterday.
Police, fire crews and the ambulance service were called to the crash which happened just before 1pm.
The lorry toppled over onto its side on the motorway roundabout at the A34 Walsall Road leading to dealys on surrounding routes.
Highways officers and police closed both the northbound and southbound exit slip roads at the junction, because the lorry was blocking the island.
In addition around 100 litres of diesel spilled from the 500 litre tank onto the carriageway covering the slip road and parts of the roundabout. The fuel spillage did not affect the M6.
Fire crews from West Bromwich and Willenhall had to cut the lorry driver, who was in his 50s, from his cab in order for him to be treated by paramedics for neck and back pain.
West Midlands Ambulance Service spokesman Steve Parry said: "Ambulance crews responded to reports of a HGV overturning on an island just off the M6 motorway at Great Barr.
"Crews treated the lorry driver, a man in his 50s, for back and neck pain.
"He was later released by emergency services, given pain relief to stabilise his condition and immobilised with the use of a neck collar and spinal board before being conveyed to City Hospital."
Police spokeswoman Gina Lycett said officers were called to the crash and both slip roads on the M6 remained closed for the rest of the afternoon.
She added emergency services were not only dealing with the diesel spillage, but also recovering the load of tyres from the lorry.
Fire service spokesman Neil Spencer said: "Our fire crews assisted the ambulance service to cut free the lorry driver from the cab.
"Once the vehicle was made safe they used special absorption granules and matting to soak up the diesel and then awaited the recovery garage to right the lorry." Fire crews left the scene at around 2.30pm.
Highways environmental monitoring officers were also called to the scene to assess whether the diesel had damaged the carriageway.
The accident happened as overnight closures continued last night on the M6 for work as part of the £126 million scheme to open up the hard shoulder to traffic.
The overnight carriageway closures are part of the managed motorway scheme between junction five at Castle Bromwich and junction seven at Great Barr.
The work is to allow highways workers to continue to install the new gantries and camera masts and installation of new communications equipment, resurfacing work and street lights.
The M6 northbound and southbound from junction five at Castle Bromwich and junction six for Spaghetti Junction were closed last night and again tonight.
Closures on Friday and Saturday nights will take place from 10pm, if traffic flows are low enough, to 8am the next morning. Diversions will be on the A452 and the A38
The lane closures came into force at the end of last month and will also be in place on June 15, 21, 22, 28 and 29, with motorists facing diversions of up to 14 miles.
Highways bosses state that once completed, the managed motorway scheme will cut congestion, make journey times more reliable and improve safety through the use of variable mandatory speed limits and by opening the hard shoulder as an extra running lane.
Once the scheme is completed it will mean the West Midlands will have the longest stretch of hard shoulder running with traffic in Britain, stretching around 30 miles from the Black Country down to Warwickshire.