Access and Gateways to the Landscape Appraisal
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Damflask Reservoir 3.5 Miles Reservoir Sheffield & 6 Km Low Bradfield Huddersfield
Title. Distance Place OS Map Damflask OS 110 Damflask Reservoir 3.5 Miles Reservoir Sheffield & 6 Km Low Bradfield Huddersfield A scenic walk which starts in the pretty village of Low Bradfield and goes around the Damflask Reservoir, which has sailing boats on during the weekends. z Facilities – In Bradfield - 2 Cafes – The Plough Inn – Village Hall – Cricket pitch – Tennis courts – Bowling green. At High Bradfield [ by car ] The Old Horns Inn and Bradfield Church. There are a few side roads to park in the village and a small car park. z Café – In Low Bradfield there is the Postcard Café at the Post Office selling drinks, sandwiches and cakes also the Schoolroom Deli, Café and bistro [ tables outside the front for wheelchairs ] - ‘The Plough Inn’ restaurant and pub meals – at High Bradfield ½ mile away up a steep hill is ‘The Old Horns Inn’ restaurant and pub meals with a spectacular view of the valley with Bradfield Church close by. z Toilets – There are public toilets in Low Bradfield and toilets at the cafés and pubs. z Path - The path around the dam is made up of fine rolled-in crushed stone, but has quite a few sloping inclines, and at the end of the dam wall you will have to go on the pavement with a slight curb or on the road – it is suitable for motorised wheelchairs, but manual wheelchairs will need to try this path out with a strong pusher – their are benches placed all the way round. Crushed Stone Path See the Gallery for more photos z Information – There are a few leaflets on Damflask Reservoir and Information on the website describes the walk and history of the reservoir. -
Howden Reservoir Indicate Trace Metal Contamination with Zn > Pb > Cr > Ni = Cu
ISSN 1476-1580 North West Geography Volume 1, Number 1, 2001 North West Geography, Volume 1, 2001 35 Reconstructing the history of heavy metal pollution in the southern Pennines from the sedimentary record of reservoirs: methods and preliminary results Laura Shotbolt, Andrew D Thomas, Simon M Hutchinson Telford Institute of Environmental Systems, University of Salford Email: adthomas@salfordacuk and Andrew J Dougill School of the Environment, University of Leeds Abstract Although the southern Pennine uplands have experienced industrially derived heavy metal pollution for almost two hundred years, an historical analysis of its depositional record has not yet been undertaken The area has no natural lakes but has many reservoirs, and despite the potential for sediment disturbance due to fluctuating water levels, reservoir sediments can be used as a record of heavy metal pollution A methodology for the selection of reservoirs with undisturbed sedimentary records, and the verification of sediment stratigraphy is proposed Preliminary results of metal analysis from the Howden reservoir indicate trace metal contamination with Zn > Pb > Cr > Ni = Cu Key Words Heavy metals, sediment, reservoirs, southern Pennines, methodology Introduction: the southern Pennines and potential use of reservoir sediment profiles In the absence of long-term instrumental The southern Pennines (Figure 1) is a vitally important records, lake and reservoir sediments can be utilised water supply region characterised by a high density as archives of catchment or atmospheric -
The Boundary Committee for England District Boundary
KEY THE BOUNDARY COMMITTEE FOR ENGLAND DISTRICT BOUNDARY PROPOSED DISTRICT WARD BOUNDARY Tankersley PARISH BOUNDARY PERIODIC ELECTORAL REVIEW OF SHEFFIELD PARISH WARD BOUNDARY PARISH WARD COINCIDENT WITH OTHER BOUNDARIES Final Recommendations for Ward Boundaries in the City of Sheffield July 2003 PROPOSED WARD NAME STANNINGTON WARD Wortley Sheet 3 of 7 Sheet 3 "This map is reproduced from the OS map by The Electoral Commission with the permission of the Controller of Her Majesty's Stationery Office, © Crown Copyright. Unauthorised reproduction infringes Crown Copyright and may lead to prosecution or civil proceedings. Licence Number: GD03114G" 1 2 3 4 7 Only Parishes whose Warding has been on D er 6 iv altered by these Recommendations have been coloured. R 5 PARK LANE Westwood Country Park B 6 088 STOCKSBRIDGE A L H Allot NORTH AS M Bla AN Gdns ckb CH urn E D Br ST on ook ER The tle R R Po it ive PARISH WARD O rter r L r AD o Reservoir W Playing Field O O D R O Y D R OA D k o o r B k r Deepcar a M Cricket Ground D B CARR ROA la ck bu rn B r oo k School HIGH GREEN Sch PARISH WARD D A School O M Recreation R O D Sports Ground Ground Deepcar St John's R RR R A T C of E Junior School K C O C M O L C E F Y Royd F L E A J N THORNCLIFFE MORTOMLEY E Thorncliffe Park PARISH WARD Estate Mortomley Park Playing Field ROYD LANE STOCKSBRIDGE STOCKSBRIDGE CP E High Green AN L EAST SO OT B UT SH roo H R CK k D CO Greengate Lane PARISH WARD Junior & Infant School Reservoir R i (covered) v e r D C o O n MM Golf Course ON LA N E E N A Angram Bank L E Junior -
Stanage Edge, in the Peak District National Park : Walking with Hikers to Understand Their Perception of the Place Maïlys Cochard
An accessible escape on stanage edge, in the peak district national park : walking with hikers to understand their perception of the place Maïlys Cochard To cite this version: Maïlys Cochard. An accessible escape on stanage edge, in the peak district national park : walking with hikers to understand their perception of the place. Engineering Sciences [physics]. 2015. dumas- 01842383 HAL Id: dumas-01842383 https://dumas.ccsd.cnrs.fr/dumas-01842383 Submitted on 18 Jul 2018 HAL is a multi-disciplinary open access L’archive ouverte pluridisciplinaire HAL, est archive for the deposit and dissemination of sci- destinée au dépôt et à la diffusion de documents entific research documents, whether they are pub- scientifiques de niveau recherche, publiés ou non, lished or not. The documents may come from émanant des établissements d’enseignement et de teaching and research institutions in France or recherche français ou étrangers, des laboratoires abroad, or from public or private research centers. publics ou privés. Copyright AN ACCESSIBLE ESCAPE ON STANAGE EDGE, IN THE PEAK DISTRICT NATIONAL PARK: WALKING WITH HIKERS TO UNDERSTAND THEIR PERCEPTION OF THE PLACE Cochard Maïlys VA Risques, Pollutions et Nuisances Promotion 60 4 Septembre 2015 Président du jury : Madame Sylvie Bony (ENTPE) Maître de TFE : Monsieur James Evans (University of Manchester) Expert : Monsieur Bill Gordon (Peak District National Park Authority) NOTICE ANALYTIQUE NOM PRENOM AUTEUR Cochard Maïlys TITRE DU TFE An accessible escape on Stanage Edge, in the Peak District National Park: walking with hikers to understand their perception of the place ORGANISME D'AFFILIATION ET NOM PRÉNOM LOCALISATION MAITRE DE TFE University of Manchester Evans James COLLATION Nombre de pages du rapport : Annexes : 52 références 53 pages 24 documents, bibliographiques 21 pages MOTS CLES Walking interviews, Accessibility, Nature, Landscape, Escape. -
THE UNIVERSITY of HULL the Influence of Flow Management And
THE UNIVERSITY OF HULL The influence of flow management and habitat improvement works on fish communities in Yorkshire rivers being a Thesis submitted for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy in the University of Hull by Marie Jane Taylor BSc. (Hons) (Hull) MSc (Res) (Hull) May 2017 TABLE OF CONTENTS LIST OF TABLES V LIST OF FIGURES IX ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS XIII ABSTRACT XIV 1 GENERAL INTRODUCTION 1 2 IMPORTANCE OF THE NATURAL FLOW REGIME FOR FISH 5 Introduction 5 The natural flow regime 5 2.2.1 Timing 6 2.2.2 Continuity/predictability 7 2.2.3 Rapidity of change 7 2.2.4 Amplitude/ magnitude 8 2.2.5 Duration 9 Modification of natural flow regimes 9 2.3.1 Reservoirs 9 2.3.2 Flood Defence 11 Current UK guidance of flow regulation and flood risk management 14 River rehabilitation and mitigation measures with specific reference to reservoirs and flood defence 16 2.5.1 Reservoir mitigation measures 17 2.5.2 Biological responses to reservoir mitigation measures 21 2.5.3 Flood defence mitigation measures 22 2.5.4 Biological response to habitat improvement works whilst considering flood risk 25 Study species 27 3. INFLUENCE OF MODIFIED RESERVOIR FLOW RELEASES ON BROWN TROUT POPULATIONS IN DOWNSTREAM RIVER REACHES 29 3.1 Introduction 29 3.2 Methodology 33 3.2.1 Study area 33 3.2.2 Fish survey methodology 37 3.2.3 HABSCORE data collection 37 3.2.4 Data analysis 38 3.3 Results 43 3.3.1 Hydrological flow parameters 43 3.3.2 Brown trout population density trends 46 3.3.3 HABSCORE 53 3.4 Discussion 56 3.4.1 Overview 56 3.4.2 Hydrological trends 56 3.4.3 Brown -
Stephen Mallinder. “Sheffield Is Not Sexy.”
Nebula 4.3 , September 2007 Sheffield is not Sexy. By Stephen Mallinder Abstract The city of Sheffield’s attempts, during the early 1980s, at promoting economic regeneration through popular cultural production were unconsciously suggestive of later creative industries strategies. Post-work economic policies, which became significant to the Blair government a decade later, were evident in urban centres such as Manchester, Liverpool and Sheffield in nascent form. The specificity of Sheffield’s socio-economic configuration gave context, not merely to its industrial narrative but also to the city’s auditory culture, which was to frame well intended though subsequently flawed strategies for regeneration. Unlike other cities, most notably Manchester, the city’s mono-cultural characteristics failed to provide an effective entrepreneurial infrastructure on which to build immediate economic response to economic rationalisation and regional decline. Top-down municipal policies, which embraced the city’s popular music, gave centrality to cultural production in response to a deflated regional economy unable, at the time, to sustain rejuvenation through cultural consumption. Such embryonic strategies would subsequently become formalised though creative industry policies developing relationships with local economies as opposed to urban engineering through regional government. Building upon the readings of industrial cities such as Liverpool, New Orleans and Chicago, the post-work leisure economy has increasingly addressed the significance of the auditory effect in cities such as Manchester and Sheffield. However the failure of the talismanic National Centre for Popular Music signifies the inherent problems of institutionalizing popular cultural forms and resistance of sound to be anchored and contained. The city’s sonic narrative became contained in its distinctive patterns of cultural production and consumption that ultimately resisted attempts at compartmentalization and representation through what became colloquially known as ‘the museum of popular music’. -
To Registers of General Admission South Yorkshire Lunatic Asylum (Later Middlewood Hospital), 1872 - 1910 : Surnames L-R
Index to Registers of General Admission South Yorkshire Lunatic Asylum (Later Middlewood Hospital), 1872 - 1910 : Surnames L-R To order a copy of an entry (which will include more information than is in this index) please complete an order form (www.sheffield.gov.uk/libraries/archives‐and‐local‐studies/copying‐ services) and send with a sterling cheque for £8.00. Please quote the name of the patient, their number and the reference number. Surname First names Date of admission Age Occupation Abode Cause of insanity Date of discharge, death, etc No. Ref No. Laceby John 01 July 1879 39 None Killingholme Weak intellect 08 February 1882 1257 NHS3/5/1/3 Lacey James 23 July 1901 26 Labourer Handsworth Epilepsy 07 November 1918 5840 NHS3/5/1/14 Lack Frances Emily 06 May 1910 24 Sheffield 30 September 1910 8714 NHS3/5/1/21 Ladlow James 14 February 1894 25 Pit Laborer Barnsley Not known 10 December 1913 4203 NHS3/5/1/10 Laidler Emily 31 December 1879 36 Housewife Sheffield Religion 30 June 1887 1489 NHS3/5/1/3 Laines Sarah 01 July 1879 42 Servant Willingham Not known 07 February 1880 1375 NHS3/5/1/3 Laister Ethel Beatrice 30 September 1910 21 Sheffield 05 July 1911 8827 NHS3/5/1/21 Laister William 18 September 1899 40 Horsekeeper Sheffield Influenza 21 December 1899 5375 NHS3/5/1/13 Laister William 28 March 1905 43 Horse keeper Sheffield Not known 14 June 1905 6732 NHS3/5/1/17 Laister William 28 April 1906 44 Carter Sheffield Not known 03 November 1906 6968 NHS3/5/1/18 Laitner Sarah 04 April 1898 29 Furniture travellers wife Worksop Death of two -
Peakland Guardian Autumn and Winter 2020
Peak District and South Yorkshire Peakland Guardian Autumn and Winter 2020 Peaklandguardian 1 In this issue… Notes from the CEO 3 Planning reforms – the wrong answers to the wrong questions 4 Planning Sheffield’s future 6 Success for the Loxley Valley 8 Hollin Busk 10 Owlthorpe Fields 10 Doncaster Local Plan 11 Longdendale – the long game 12 Save our Monsal Trail 13 New OfGEM pylon plans 13 Decarbonising transport 14 Hope Valley Climate Action 15 Hayfield’s solar farm project 16 Greener, Better, Faster 17 Party plans for gothic lodge 18 Britannia Mill, Buxworth 18 Hope Cement Works Quarry ©Tomo Thompson Business Sponsor Focus 19 Right to Roam 19 New trustees 20 We have been the same Welcome from the CEO Ethel’s legacy 21 CPRE branch since 1927 but since 2002 we’ve also Welcome to the latest edition of the Peakland Guardian. The articles in this edition New branding and website 21 been known as Friends cover a very broad range of our work over the last 6 months. The Trustees and I are Obituaries 22 of the Peak District. We’re now very grateful for the work that the staff and volunteers have continued to put in, in very Membership update 23 going back to our roots: Same charity. Same passion for our local difficult circumstances, in order to protect the landscapes of the Peak District and South CPRE Peak District and South Yorkshire promotes the countryside. Yorkshire. beauty, tranquility and diversity of the countryside across the Peak District and South Yorkshire. We work to protect and Over the last 6 months, the pandemic has had little impact on our workload, indeed enhance its unique landscapes for everyone to enjoy now Follow us on social we are exceptionally busy at the moment, however the pandemic has stopped almost and in the future. -
WEST RIDING YORKSHIRE. 426 Workman William, Confectioner, 164: Gibbet Street Wynn & 'Firth, Jfnen Drapeta, Li, Fj &
WEST RIDING YORKSHIRE. 426 Workman William, confectioner, 164: Gibbet street Wynn & 'Firth, Jfnen drapeta, li, fJ & ,. WooTshops Wormald Jonas, Bhopkeeper, 146 Booth Town road Yates Alfred, engineer's tool maker, West parade Worsick Richard, maltster, 8 Sa vile ter. Sa\'tle Park \'oad Yates Emanuel, greengrocer, 113 Gibbet street Worsnop Chas. & Co. fancy goods importers, 2 & 4 Cheapside Yates Ann (Mrs.), grocer, 2 Stone street, Caddy fleld Wortley John, grocer, 38 Great Albion street Yates George, ~een~cer 30 Gibbet street Wright David, cattle dealer, 17 Clare roarl Yates George, Old King Cron Inn 111 King Cross 'rOad Wrigbt George William, confectioner (who.}, Thompson st Yates Sarah (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 82 Clarence streflt Wright Henry, draper, 164. Booth Town road Yates William Speakman, machine maker, Booth town Wright James, law stationer, 1 Upper George yard Yorkshire Boot ~ Shoe Co. 2 Crossley st-reet Wright John Hodgson, surgeon,8 Park Road villas Yorkshirs Penny Bank (George Rawnsley, tnanaget), Wright Macaulay, milliner, Grove place, Ovendeuroad Waterhouse street Wrights Hodgson, surgeon, 23 Aked's road Yotk.•hirs (West lliding) Artillery Yolunteer1 (21ad) Wrigley Elizabeth (Mrs.), Bull'1 Head,5 Bull green (7th~ 8th batteries) (John B.Holroyde, capt. eommand- Wylde Arthor V. carver&: gilder, 50 Hanson lane ant; Jas. Steele, surgeon), IS Llster street UPPER HALI.AM is a scattered township within the and endowed in 1838 by 1\liss Ph<Bbe SJlcock ; it eonsiste municipal and parliamentary borough of Sheffield, inclu of chancel, -
Uppergate Road Stannington Sheffield S6 6DB Prices from £269999
Uppergate Road Stannington Sheffield S6 6DB Prices From £269,999 Uppergate Road Sheffield S6 6DB Prices From £269,999 PRICES FROM £269,999 ** COMING SOON, TO REGISTER AN EARLY INTEREST CONTACT SAXTON MEE TODAY ** Exclusively designed for the over 60s, McCarthy & Stone Retirement Village is a stunning new development of one and two bedroom retirement apartments located on Uppergate Road in the beautiful Sheffield suburb of Stannington. Finished to an extremely high standard as a registered builder with the NHBC, all new McCarthy & Stone apartments come with a 10 year NHBC Warranty. Double glazing and insulation, your apartment is designed to be incredibly energy efficient, allowing you to keep warm whilst helping to keep your heating bills low. We’ll also ensure that telephone, TV and Sky connection points are fitted ready for the day you move in. Safe and secure with peace of mind comes from a door entry system linked to your TV, so you can see who’s there before letting anyone in. There’s also an intruder alarm and a 24-hour emergency call system, giving access to assistance whenever you need it. Throughout the apartment the decor is light and neutral – a blank canvas, so that whatever your taste in furniture and furnishings, everything is sure to co-ordinate beautifully. You’ll have plenty of scope to make your apartment your own by incorporating your own personal touches. In the kitchen, you’ll see that we’ve incorporated a range of quality appliances, including a waist- height oven, ceramic hob, and integrated fridge/freezer. Everything is designed to make cooking and cleaning as effortless as possible. -
SHEFFIELD and ROTHERHA:\1 SUBURBS. BRI C~Mprisel& Nav'e Withcaisle~, Chtttlcel with Side Ch::Tpe1~, Fitzwilliam, Lj.S.O., Messrs
SHEFFIELD AND ROTHERHA:\1 SUBURBS. BRI c~mprisel& naV'e withcaisle~, chtttlcel with side ch::tpe1~, Fitzwilliam, lJ.S.O., Messrs. Thomas "'~rAgg ·and and a. rower cont"ining six bells and a. clock. The Sons, John S. Roberts, M. D. and Mr. T. Jessop-. d pulpit, three .screens, and the chancel stalls are of The area is 38,369 acres, including 56 acres of finely carved oak; there is also a. fine oak reredos, the water; rateable value, £58,061; the population in carved panels of which were brought over from Nor- 1901 was 9.099. 1 mandy ; the interior is seated with open benches, SEXTON, Jonathan Gillott. a.nd contains an ancient Saxon cross, dug up at a PosT OFFICE at Jonathan Gillott's. Letters place called "The Cross," in Low Bradfielu, and arrive via Sheffield at 7.40 a. m. and are dispatched jplaced in the church in 1886. In 1903 the roofs of the at 5.5 p.m. via Sheffield. No delivery on Sundays. ·chancel and s:de chapels were restored at a cost of WALL LETTER Box at J,ow Bradfield cleared at 4.45 £846. The register dates from 1559. The living is a. p.m. week days only. Oughtibridge (under 3 miles) rectory, net yearly value £246. with residence, in is the nearest Money Order and Telegraph Office. -the gift of the vicar of Ecclesfield. and held since 1888 by the Rev. Arthur Briarly Browne M.A. of At High Bradfield is a CnURCH OF ENGLAND "St. John'$ College, Cambridge. The WESLEYAN ScHOOL, built by Mrs. -
Vebraalto.Com
Uppergate Road Stannington Sheffield S6 6DB Prices From £194,999 Uppergate Road Sheffield S6 6DB Prices From £194,999 PRICES FROM £194,999 ** COMING SOON, TO REGISTER AN EARLY INTEREST CONTACT SAXTON MEE TODAY ** Exclusively designed for the over 60s, McCarthy & Stone Retirement Village is a stunning new development of one and two bedroom retirement apartments located on Uppergate Road in the beautiful Sheffield suburb of Stannington. Finished to an extremely high standard as a registered builder with the NHBC, all new McCarthy & Stone apartments come with a 10 year NHBC Warranty. Double glazing and insulation, your apartment is designed to be incredibly energy efficient, allowing you to keep warm whilst helping to keep your heating bills low. We’ll also ensure that telephone, TV and Sky connection points are fitted ready for the day you move in. Safe and secure with peace of mind comes from a door entry system linked to your TV, so you can see who’s there before letting anyone in. There’s also an intruder alarm and a 24-hour emergency call system, giving access to assistance whenever you need it. Throughout the apartment the decor is light and neutral – a blank canvas, so that whatever your taste in furniture and furnishings, everything is sure to co-ordinate beautifully. You’ll have plenty of scope to make your apartment your own by incorporating your own personal touches. In the kitchen, you’ll see that we’ve incorporated a range of quality appliances, including a waist- height oven, ceramic hob, and integrated fridge/freezer. Everything is designed to make cooking and cleaning as effortless as possible.