Wainwrights Outlying Fells

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Wainwrights Outlying Fells GR(6) Hill Name Height GridEast GridNorth Latitude NY515052 Bannisdale Fell-Long Crag 493 51594 5254 54.440381 SD278907 Beacon Fell 255 27809 90710 54.306877 SD363839 Bigland Barrow 193 36356 83985 54.247584 SD135854 Black Combe 600 13549 85490 54.257759 SD260883 Blawith Knott 248 26072 88393 54.285809 NY177034 Boat How 337 17725 3402 54.419381 SD409961 Brant Fell 191 40970 96144 54.357402 NY484006 Brunt Knott 427 48441 625 54.398481 SD151910 Buck Barrow 549 15198 91049 54.307983 SD151924 Burn Moor 543 15162 92437 54.320448 SD260858 Burney 298 26074 85866 54.263103 NY195371 Caermote Hill 289 19599 37157 54.722964 NY508035 Capplebarrow 513 50800 3542 54.424929 SD325943 Carron Crag 314 32528 94337 54.340115 SD230944 Caw 529 23041 94452 54.339804 SD382973 Claife Heights 270 38203 97344 54.367856 NY159352 Clints Crags (Wainwright summit) 245 15925 35261 54.705329 NY058092 Cold Fell 293 5811 9204 54.469439 SD491943 Cunswick Scar 207 49154 94302 54.341732 NY037130 Dent 346 3740 13049 54.503594 NY467246 Dunmallet (Dunmallard Hill) 240 46777 24637 54.614076 SD207918 Dunnerdale Fells 280 20708 91876 54.3163 NY299407 Faulds Brow 344 29941 40717 54.7565 NY513117 Fewling Stones 509 51307 11776 54.498962 SD360883 Finsthwaite Heights 180 36093 88372 54.286973 NY052137 Flat Fell 272 5248 13718 54.509889 SD432972 Grandsire 251 43215 97279 54.367856 NY532123 Great Ladstones 440 53207 12365 54.504435 NY526086 Great Saddle Crag 560 52609 8661 54.471093 SD211915 Great Stickle 305 21173 91596 54.313856 SD194968 Great Worm Crag 427 19403 96875 54.361004 NY525075 Great Yarlside 591 52513 7596 54.461514 SD236950 Green Pikes 420 23628 95090 54.345625 SD390884 Gummer's How 321 39043 88486 54.288359 SD399793 Hampsfell (Wainwright summit) 220 39933 79372 54.206563 NY497131 Hare Shaw 503 49759 13150 54.511158 NY509142 Harper Hills 414 50944 14241 54.521079 SD176946 Hesk Fell 477 17605 94669 54.340904 NY488231 Heughscar Hill 375 48800 23165 54.601058 NY543048 High House Bank 495 54312 4839 54.436904 NY454001 High Knott 275 45431 130 54.393719 SD303904 High Light Haw 263 30335 90475 54.305117 NY514109 High Wether Howe 531 51496 10924 54.491324 NY469040 Hollow Moor (Green Quarter Fell) 426 46918 4038 54.428986 NY498103 Howes 583 49821 10379 54.486263 NY502151 Hugh's Laithes Pike 419 50214 15162 54.529284 SD462994 Hugill Fell (Wainwright summit) 265 46228 99417 54.387397 SD390739 Humphrey Head 53 39096 73973 54.157947 NY120015 Irton Pike 229 12070 1548 54.401785 SD146909 Kinmont Buck Barrow 535 14678 90971 54.307196 NY526191 Knipescar Common (Knipe Scar) 342 52666 19118 54.565069 NY534020 Lamb Pasture 367 53450 2098 54.412202 NY528134 Langhowe Pike 401 52837 13478 54.514402 SD367990 Latterbarrow 244 36721 99093 54.383382 NY530071 Little Yarlside 518 53097 7166 54.457704 NY518066 Lord's Seat (Crookdale) (Lord's Seat-High House Fell) 524 51844 6614 54.452626 SD301900 Low Light Haw 250 30151 90087 54.301605 SD112983 Muncaster Fell-Hooker Crag 231.4 11209 98351 54.372911 NY503111 Nabs Moor 493 50340 11104 54.49283 NY492143 Naddle High Forest (nameless (Naddle Horseshoe-1)) 435 49244 14309 54.521522 NY502059 nameless (Bannisdale Horseshoe-Ancrow Brow N) 541 50296 5912 54.446177 NY473042 nameless (Green Quarter) (Hollow Moor East Top) 413 47351 4256 54.43099 NY505152 nameless (Naddle Horseshoe-3) 395 50528 15236 54.529979 SD489998 nameless (Potter Fell-1) (Brunt Knott South Top) 395 48960 99818 54.391282 NY496003 nameless (Potter Fell-2) (Potter Fell) 390 49664 351 54.396142 SD428967 nameless (School Knott) 247 42845 96723 54.362819 SD298898 nameless (Top o' Selside-Brock Barrow) 221 29811 89813 54.299097 SD395842 Newton Fell North 237 39513 84288 54.25069 SD413815 Newton Fell South (Dixon Heights) 177 41349 81559 54.226381 SD414993 Orrest Head 238 41423 99359 54.386344 SD237947 Pikes 469 23756 94745 54.342544 NY081070 Ponsonby Fell 315 8196 7031 54.450353 SD412879 Raven's Barrow (Cartmel Fell) 152 41279 87928 54.283606 SD223929 Raven's Crag (nameless (Stickle Pike-Raven's Crag)) 361 22373 92924 54.325973 SD460987 Reston Scar 255 46015 98792 54.381758 NY530058 Robin Hood 493 53036 5867 54.446034 SD161977 Rough Crag (Birker Moor) 319 16108 97758 54.368414 NY519153 Scalebarrow Knott 338 51984 15314 54.530821 SD425974 School Knott 231.7 42546 97421 54.369057 SD486919 Scout Scar (Wainwright summit) 233 48662 91982 54.320834 SD165971 Seat How (Birker Moor) 311 16549 97109 54.362647 NY526114 Seat Robert 515 52641 11405 54.495755 NY535094 Sleddale Pike 506 53546 9426 54.478055 NY196376 St. John's Hill (Caermote Hill N Top) 285 19602 37670 54.727574 SD152942 Stainton Pike 498 15259 94265 54.336889 SD389868 Staveley Fell 265 38950 86863 54.273763 SD212927 Stickle Pike 375 21201 92796 54.324643 SD151873 Stoupdale Head 472 15148 87370 54.274919 NY500049 Swinklebank Crag (Ancrow Brow) (nameless (Bannisdale Horseshoe)) 554 50067 4908 54.437124 SD209920 Tarn Hill 313 20949 92098 54.318332 NY527035 The Forest (Borrowdale Head) (nameless (Bannisdale Horseshoe)) 528 52760 3568 54.425349 SD224919 The Knott 284 22419 91938 54.31712 SD143951 The Knott (Stainton Fell) 331 14366 95151 54.344701 SD186934 The Pike 370 18640 93410 54.329758 NY512020 Todd Fell 401 51225 2058 54.411634 SD308918 Top o' Selside (Wainwright summit) 334 30805 91862 54.317644 SD269885 Tottlebank Height 236 26922 88512 54.287001 SD511995 Ulgraves 333 51103 99596 54.389498 NY514093 Ulthwaite Rigg 502 51462 9334 54.477033 NY496149 Wallow Crag (nameless (Naddle Horseshoe-2)) 433 49646 14934 54.527178 SD257963 Walna Scar 621 25769 96340 54.357173 NY536084 Wasdale Pike 565 53637 8496 54.469706 NY149318 Watch Hill 235 14982 31881 54.674803 NY159318 Watch Hill (Setmurthy Common) 254 15916 31820 54.674412 SD153974 Water Crag 305 15385 97477 54.36577 NY541061 Whatshaw Common 490 54194 6195 54.449079 SD441870 Whitbarrow-Lord's Seat 215 44174 87045 54.275996 SD154862 White Combe 417 15452 86284 54.265211 NY523041 White Howe (Bannisdale) 530 52363 4197 54.430964 SD150956 White Pike (Birkby Fell) 442 15061 95637 54.349175 NY520015 Whiteside Pike 397 52072 1513 54.406817 SD158929 Whitfell 573 15881 92983 54.325473 SD156954 Woodend Height 489 15678 95446 54.34757 SD272896 Wool Knott 223 27270 89621 54.297016 SD262909 Yew Bank 207 26250 90961 54.30891 SD156952 Yoadcastle 494 15691 95244 54.345757 Longitude -2.747857 -3.110996 -2.978227 -3.328573 -3.137097 -3.26945 -2.909832 -2.795661 -3.304845 -3.305793 -3.136441 -3.249822 -2.759814 -3.039304 -3.18521 -2.952654 -3.306286 -3.454829 -2.783598 -3.488027 -2.825628 -3.2204 -3.090144 -2.753358 -2.9832 -3.464963 -2.875508 -2.724116 -2.732755 -3.21318 -3.241809 -2.734065 -3.176362 -2.937913 -2.922414 -2.777492 -2.759373 -3.268861 -2.794049 -2.705888 -2.841928 -3.072126 -2.750299 -2.819729 -2.776063 -2.770806 -2.829526 -2.934151 -3.356009 -3.312812 -2.733557 -2.718746 -2.730008 -2.975833 -2.724988 -2.744224 -3.074863 -3.368312 -2.768174 -2.785646 -2.767979 -2.813094 -2.765966 -2.787529 -2.776779 -2.881095 -3.080022 -2.929845 -2.901135 -2.903497 -3.174305 -3.417366 -2.903459 -3.195084 -2.832692 -2.725722 -3.292752 -2.743482 -2.885831 -2.790765 -3.285784 -2.732702 -2.718418 -3.249918 -3.304822 -2.93901 -3.213066 -3.304568 -2.771341 -3.216755 -2.729611 -3.19412 -3.318807 -3.252601 -2.753019 -3.065227 -3.124087 -2.754493 -2.750562 -2.779542 -3.143745 -2.716868 -3.319931 -3.305448 -3.303798 -2.707917 -2.858831 -3.299593 -2.735831 -3.308257 -2.739882 -3.294896 -3.298714 -3.119013 -3.135013 -3.298456.
Recommended publications
  • Draft Core Strategy
    South Lakeland Local Development Framework Draft Core Strategy JULY 2009 Lawrence Conway, Corporate Director (Community), South Lakeland District Council www.southlakeland.gov.uk/ldf Alternative formats of this document are available by calling 01539 733333 ext.7102 FOREWORD South Lakeland’s superb natural setting shapes the district’s image and plays a major role in its development, making it a very attractive location for residents and visitors alike. However, while the district can offer a quality of life that is second to none, it does experience problems common to many rural areas. There is a need to deliver more balanced communities and reduce inequality, including reducing dependency on high-level services and jobs in towns outside the district, increasing provision of affordable housing and developing and maintaining high-quality modern sustainable transport networks. We must also meet challenging targets laid down by central government, most notably for house building. The challenge is to secure a sustainable level and pattern of development that creates balanced communities and meets local needs whilst protecting the environment that makes the district special. The Core Strategy document sets out the development strategy for South Lakeland outside the National Park areas up to 2025. It is a long-term plan. It draws together strategies of the council and other organisations whose activities have implications for the development and use of land. It puts the aspirations of the Sustainable Community Strategy into effect – seeking to create a sustainable district that is the best possible place to live, work and visit. We are inviting representations from everybody with an interest in the future of our district.
    [Show full text]
  • Folk Song in Cumbria: a Distinctive Regional
    FOLK SONG IN CUMBRIA: A DISTINCTIVE REGIONAL REPERTOIRE? A dissertation submitted in partial fulfilment of the degree of Doctor of Philosophy by Susan Margaret Allan, MA (Lancaster), BEd (London) University of Lancaster, November 2016 ABSTRACT One of the lacunae of traditional music scholarship in England has been the lack of systematic study of folk song and its performance in discrete geographical areas. This thesis endeavours to address this gap in knowledge for one region through a study of Cumbrian folk song and its performance over the past two hundred years. Although primarily a social history of popular culture, with some elements of ethnography and a little musicology, it is also a participant-observer study from the personal perspective of one who has performed and collected Cumbrian folk songs for some forty years. The principal task has been to research and present the folk songs known to have been published or performed in Cumbria since circa 1900, designated as the Cumbrian Folk Song Corpus: a body of 515 songs from 1010 different sources, including manuscripts, print, recordings and broadcasts. The thesis begins with the history of the best-known Cumbrian folk song, ‘D’Ye Ken John Peel’ from its date of composition around 1830 through to the late twentieth century. From this narrative the main themes of the thesis are drawn out: the problem of defining ‘folk song’, given its eclectic nature; the role of the various collectors, mediators and performers of folk songs over the years, including myself; the range of different contexts in which the songs have been performed, and by whom; the vexed questions of ‘authenticity’ and ‘invented tradition’, and the extent to which this repertoire is a distinctive regional one.
    [Show full text]
  • Newsletter Appleby Archaeology
    Winter 2011 Appleby Archaeology Heather Edwards, Spring Programme Newsletter AGM and Members’ Evening th 7.00pm Tuesday 10 January Volume 14 Issue 4 Winter 2011 Martin Railton : Altogether Archaeology on Brackenber Moor - Results of the 2011 Excavations at the “Roman Signal Station” Group News quired low level oblique aerial photographs, for example, Round the Museums appear to show an enclosure around the summit, with the cairns lying diagonally across it. Is this feature due to li- Richard Stevens : More on Abbeytown - an I hope you've noticed a subtle change in your Newsletter. I’m not normally much interested in museums but, curi- thology as some have claimed, or archaeology? We think outlying chapel at Holme St. Cuthbert Yes, your Committee has decided that the time has finally ously, I find that I’ve visited no fewer than four local ex- it is time to find out. come for us to switch to colour! I hope you'll agree that hibitions this summer. photographs, in particular, have benefited from the We therefore need to raise funds and support locally to The first was the Dock Museum at Barrow. I only went change. We've decided to try it for a year, at any rate. pay for archaeologists to conduct non-intrusive techniques because this was where Apparch’s annual summer day- Great Langdale Axe Factories Please let us know what you think. of investigation, and for laboratory analyses that we our- trip dropped us on our way to Furness Abbey. But I’m selves cannot provide. Our target is £6500 and have al- Tuesday 14th February Other changes in the pipeline included proposed amend- very glad I did because I thought it was quite wonderful.
    [Show full text]
  • Windermere Way
    WINDERMERE WAY AROUND ENGLAND’S FINEST LAKE WINDERMERE WAY - WALKING SHORT BREAK SUMMARY The Windermere Way combines a delightful series of linked walks around Lake Windermere, taking in some of the finest views of the Lake District. Starting in the pretty town of Ambleside, the Windermere Way is made up of four distinct day walks which are all linked by ferries across the Lake. So you not only get to enjoy some wonderful walking but can also sit back and relax on some beautiful ferry journeys across Lake Windermere! The Windermere Way is a twin-centre walking holiday combining 2 nights in the lively lakeside town of Ambleside with 3 nights in the bustling Bowness-on-Windermere. Each day you will do a different walk and use the Windermere Ferries to take you to or from Ambleside or Bowness. From Ambleside, you will catch your first ferry to the lovely lakeside town of Bowness, where you will begin walking. Over the next four days you will take in highlights such as the magnificent views from Wansfell Pike, the glistening Loughrigg Tarn, and some delightful lakeshore walking. Most of the time you are walking on well maintained paths and trails and this is combined with some easy sections of road walking. Sometimes you will be climbing high up into the hills and at others you will be strolling along close to the lake on nice flat paths. Tour: Windermere Way Code: WESWW The Windermere Way includes hand-picked overnight accommodation in high quality B&B’s or Type: Self-Guided Walking Holiday guesthouses in Ambleside and Bowness.
    [Show full text]
  • Bowness Pier to Near Sawrey and the Tarns
    Bowness Pier to Near Sawrey Walk 4 (Hill Top - The House of Beatrix Potter) Walk 4A and the Tarns Walk 5 Belle Grange Yellow Dotted Line Download W I Route N D E R Wise Een M Tarn E R E Moss Eccles Tarn Isle START Bowness Belle Pier 3 Far Ferry Sawrey House Near Sawrey (Hill Top) Town End As with walks 2 and 3 you need to cross the lake in order to reach Hill Top and therefore we refer you to details of ferry crossings in the opening paragraph of Walk 2.The traditional launch takes only 10 minutes from Pier 3 at Bowness to the other side and you will find the boat often combines with a bus service when you arrive at Ferry House. The bus from Ferry House takes a further 10 minutes to Hill Top before going on to Hawkshead and if you wish to travel this way we recommend you purchase a combined ticket. If you prefer to walk to Hill Top remember the road is narrow and dangerous in places and off road footpaths have been created for your safety and enjoyment so please use them where possible. Walking time approx. 45-50 minutes. For details of Hill Top see Page 38. 12 Walk 4 Ferry House to Hill Top - 45/50 minutes. 1 Disembarking from the passenger ferry or the car ferry walk past the public toilets - Bus stop is here - and follow the road around for 100 metres and look for the footpath on the right, yellow arrow and signed (Hill Top via Sawrey, Ash Landing, Claife Viewing Station).
    [Show full text]
  • Complete 230 Fellranger Tick List A
    THE LAKE DISTRICT FELLS – PAGE 1 A-F CICERONE Fell name Height Volume Date completed Fell name Height Volume Date completed Allen Crags 784m/2572ft Borrowdale Brock Crags 561m/1841ft Mardale and the Far East Angletarn Pikes 567m/1860ft Mardale and the Far East Broom Fell 511m/1676ft Keswick and the North Ard Crags 581m/1906ft Buttermere Buckbarrow (Corney Fell) 549m/1801ft Coniston Armboth Fell 479m/1572ft Borrowdale Buckbarrow (Wast Water) 430m/1411ft Wasdale Arnison Crag 434m/1424ft Patterdale Calf Crag 537m/1762ft Langdale Arthur’s Pike 533m/1749ft Mardale and the Far East Carl Side 746m/2448ft Keswick and the North Bakestall 673m/2208ft Keswick and the North Carrock Fell 662m/2172ft Keswick and the North Bannerdale Crags 683m/2241ft Keswick and the North Castle Crag 290m/951ft Borrowdale Barf 468m/1535ft Keswick and the North Catbells 451m/1480ft Borrowdale Barrow 456m/1496ft Buttermere Catstycam 890m/2920ft Patterdale Base Brown 646m/2119ft Borrowdale Caudale Moor 764m/2507ft Mardale and the Far East Beda Fell 509m/1670ft Mardale and the Far East Causey Pike 637m/2090ft Buttermere Bell Crags 558m/1831ft Borrowdale Caw 529m/1736ft Coniston Binsey 447m/1467ft Keswick and the North Caw Fell 697m/2287ft Wasdale Birkhouse Moor 718m/2356ft Patterdale Clough Head 726m/2386ft Patterdale Birks 622m/2241ft Patterdale Cold Pike 701m/2300ft Langdale Black Combe 600m/1969ft Coniston Coniston Old Man 803m/2635ft Coniston Black Fell 323m/1060ft Coniston Crag Fell 523m/1716ft Wasdale Blake Fell 573m/1880ft Buttermere Crag Hill 839m/2753ft Buttermere
    [Show full text]
  • Number 71 October 2013
    Number 71 FellFarerthe October 2013 Editorial CLUB OFFICIALS Sometimes you get a photograph that you know just has to be the front page picture. PRESIDENT: Gordon Pitt Tel: 015395 68210 Sometimes you don’t and you struggle to find VICE PRESIDENT: Roger Atkinson Tel: 01539732490 any reasonable picture that will do. Then , perversely, they seem to come along like buses TRUSTEES Vicky Atkinson Tel: 07971 408378 - too many all at the same time. Mick Fox Tel: 01539 727531 Cheryl Smallwood Tel: 01629 650164 That’s how it was this time; I had several Mark Walsh Tel: 01606 891050 photographs that would have all made great front cover shots. So which one to choose? COMMITTEE Well, most of the contenders were of the Chairman: Roger Atkinson Tel: 01539 732490 198, Burneside Road Shinscrapers on the crags around Kendal on Kendal LA96EB Thursday evenings but there was just this one, email: [email protected] a happy accident, taken in the dark at the campsite on the shore of Ullswater. I asked Vice Chairman: Mark Walsh Tel: 01606 891050 20, Knutsford Road the Secretary to choose and she answered Antrobus without hesitation. I was pleased. She was Northwich right so I used it. Cheshire CW9 6JW Thanks you to this issue’s contributers : email: [email protected] John Peat, Paul East, Sarah, Matt and Emma Secretary: Clare Fox Tel: 01539 727531 Jennings, Helen Speed, Alec Reynolds, Joan 50, Gillinggate Abbot, David Birkett, Ruth Joyce, Peter and Kendal Nat Blamire LA94JB email: [email protected] Ed. Cover Photograph: Treasurer: Val Calder Tel: 01539727109 Jess Walsh and Kirsten Ball toasting marshmallows, 86, Vicarage Drive The Water Weekend Kendal LA95BA Side Farm Campsite.
    [Show full text]
  • A Tectonic History of Northwest England
    A tectonic history of northwest England FRANK MOSELEY CONTENTS Introduction 56x Caledonian earth movements 562 (A) Skiddaw Slate structures . 562 (B) Borrowdale Volcanic structures . 570 (C) Deformation of the Coniston Limestone and Silurian rocks 574 (D) Comment on Ingleton-Austwick inlier 580 Variscan earth movements. 580 (A) General . 580 (B) Folds 584 (C) Fractures. 587 4 Post Triassic (Alpine) earth movements 589 5 References 59 ° SUMMARY Northwest England has been affected by the generally northerly and could be posthumous Caledonian, Variscan and Alpine orogenies upon a pre,Cambrian basement. The end- no one of which is entirely unrelated to the Silurian structures include early N--S and later others. Each successive phase is partially NE to ~NE folding. dependent on earlier ones, whilst structures The Variscan structures are in part deter- in older rocks became modified by succeeding mined by locations of the older massifs and in events. There is thus an evolutionary structural part they are likely to be posthumous upon sequence, probably originating in a pre- older structures with important N-S and N~. Cambrian basement and extending to the elements. Caledonian wrench faults were present. reactivated, largely with dip slip movement. The Caledonian episodes are subdivided into The more gentle Alpine structures also pre-Borrowdale Volcanic, pre-Caradoc and follow the older trends with a N-s axis of warp end-Silurian phases. The recent suggestions of or tilt and substantial block faulting. The latter a severe pre-Borrowdale volcanic orogeny are was a reactivation of older fault lines and rejected but there is a recognizable angular resulted in uplift of the old north Pennine unconformity at the base of the volcanic rocks.
    [Show full text]
  • Early Christian' Archaeology of Cumbria
    Durham E-Theses A reassessment of the early Christian' archaeology of Cumbria O'Sullivan, Deirdre M. How to cite: O'Sullivan, Deirdre M. (1980) A reassessment of the early Christian' archaeology of Cumbria, Durham theses, Durham University. Available at Durham E-Theses Online: http://etheses.dur.ac.uk/7869/ Use policy The full-text may be used and/or reproduced, and given to third parties in any format or medium, without prior permission or charge, for personal research or study, educational, or not-for-prot purposes provided that: • a full bibliographic reference is made to the original source • a link is made to the metadata record in Durham E-Theses • the full-text is not changed in any way The full-text must not be sold in any format or medium without the formal permission of the copyright holders. Please consult the full Durham E-Theses policy for further details. Academic Support Oce, Durham University, University Oce, Old Elvet, Durham DH1 3HP e-mail: [email protected] Tel: +44 0191 334 6107 http://etheses.dur.ac.uk Deirdre M. O'Sullivan A reassessment of the Early Christian.' Archaeology of Cumbria ABSTRACT This thesis consists of a survey of events and materia culture in Cumbria for the period-between the withdrawal of Roman troops from Britain circa AD ^10, and the Viking settlement in Cumbria in the tenth century. An attempt has been made to view the archaeological data within the broad framework provided by environmental, historical and onomastic studies. Chapters 1-3 assess the current state of knowledge in these fields in Cumbria, and provide an introduction to the archaeological evidence, presented and discussed in Chapters ^--8, and set out in Appendices 5-10.
    [Show full text]
  • Mountain Accidents 2015
    ISSN 2046-6277 LAKE DISTRICT SEARCH & MOUNTAIN RESCUE ASSOCIATION MOUNTAIN ACCIDENTS 2015 Cambridge Crag and Bowfell from ‘Wainwright’s Southern Fells’ and reproduced by courtesy of the Westmorland Gazette The Lake District Search and Mountain Rescue Association would like to acknowledge the contributions given to this association by all members of the public, public bodies and trusts. In particular, this association gratefully acknowledges the assistance given by Cumbria Constabulary. Contents Introduction ................................................................... 2 Chairman’s Report ........................................................ 3 Incident Details 2015 January ................................................................. 5 February ................................................................ 7 March .................................................................... 12 April ....................................................................... 16 May ....................................................................... 21 June ...................................................................... 26 July ........................................................................ 31 August ................................................................... 35 September ............................................................. 43 October ................................................................. 48 November .............................................................. 54 December .............................................................
    [Show full text]
  • RR 01 07 Lake District Report.Qxp
    A stratigraphical framework for the upper Ordovician and Lower Devonian volcanic and intrusive rocks in the English Lake District and adjacent areas Integrated Geoscience Surveys (North) Programme Research Report RR/01/07 NAVIGATION HOW TO NAVIGATE THIS DOCUMENT Bookmarks The main elements of the table of contents are bookmarked enabling direct links to be followed to the principal section headings and sub-headings, figures, plates and tables irrespective of which part of the document the user is viewing. In addition, the report contains links: from the principal section and subsection headings back to the contents page, from each reference to a figure, plate or table directly to the corresponding figure, plate or table, from each figure, plate or table caption to the first place that figure, plate or table is mentioned in the text and from each page number back to the contents page. RETURN TO CONTENTS PAGE BRITISH GEOLOGICAL SURVEY RESEARCH REPORT RR/01/07 A stratigraphical framework for the upper Ordovician and Lower Devonian volcanic and intrusive rocks in the English Lake The National Grid and other Ordnance Survey data are used with the permission of the District and adjacent areas Controller of Her Majesty’s Stationery Office. Licence No: 100017897/2004. D Millward Keywords Lake District, Lower Palaeozoic, Ordovician, Devonian, volcanic geology, intrusive rocks Front cover View over the Scafell Caldera. BGS Photo D4011. Bibliographical reference MILLWARD, D. 2004. A stratigraphical framework for the upper Ordovician and Lower Devonian volcanic and intrusive rocks in the English Lake District and adjacent areas. British Geological Survey Research Report RR/01/07 54pp.
    [Show full text]
  • Landscape Conservation Action Plan Part 1
    Fellfoot Forward Landscape Conservation Action Plan Part 1 Fellfoot Forward Landscape Partnership Scheme Landscape Conservation Action Plan 1 Fellfoot Forward is led by the North Pennines AONB Partnership and supported by the National Lottery Heritage Fund. Our Fellfoot Forward Landscape Partnership includes these partners Contents Landscape Conservation Action Plan Part 1 1. Acknowledgements 3 8 Fellfoot Forward LPS: making it happen 88 2. Foreword 4 8.1 Fellfoot Forward: the first steps 89 3. Executive Summary: A Manifesto for Our Landscape 5 8.2 Community consultation 90 4 Using the LCAP 6 8.3 Fellfoot Forward LPS Advisory Board 93 5 Understanding the Fellfoot Forward Landscape 7 8.4 Fellfoot Forward: 2020 – 2024 94 5.1 Location 8 8.5 Key milestones and events 94 5.2 What do we mean by landscape? 9 8.6 Delivery partners 96 5.3 Statement of Significance: 8.7 Staff team 96 what makes our Fellfoot landscape special? 10 8.8 Fellfoot Forward LPS: Risk register 98 5.4 Landscape Character Assessment 12 8.9 Financial arrangements 105 5.5 Beneath it all: Geology 32 8.10 Scheme office 106 5.6 Our past: pre-history to present day 38 8.11 Future Fair 106 5.7 Communities 41 8.12 Communications framework 107 5.8 The visitor experience 45 8.13 Evaluation and monitoring 113 5.9 Wildlife and habitats of the Fellfoot landscape 50 8.14 Changes to Scheme programme and budget since first stage submission 114 5.10 Moorlands 51 9 Key strategy documents 118 5.11 Grassland 52 5.12 Rivers and Streams 53 APPENDICES 5.13 Trees, woodlands and hedgerows 54 1 Glossary
    [Show full text]