Walking in the Yorkshire Dales: South and West. Dennis Kelsall

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views encompass them both. And it is from this perspective that the two really do come together to be appreciated as a single entity – The Yorkshire Dales.

      Set between the Stainmoor and Aire gaps north and south, the Lune Valley in the west and running out onto the great expanse of the Yorkshire Vale to the east, the Dales cover a relatively compact area of upland plateau fragmented by a number of main valley systems. The tumbling rivers of the Swale, Ure, Nidd, Wharfe and Aire all unite in the River Ouse, which, meeting the Trent, becomes the Humber as it runs into the North Sea. The Ribble, together with those streams gathered by the peripheral Lune, find their freedom to the west in the Irish Sea, while Mallerstang alone drains northward along the Eden Valley to Carlisle and the Solway Firth. Feeding them is a multitude of lesser rivers that gnaw deep into the heartland, creating a maze of smaller valleys and dales each proclaiming its own subtly different character. This variance is rooted in underlying geology, positional geography and the product of elemental forces, but important too is the way man has settled and exploited them over millennia. Farming, husbandry, woodland management, quarrying and mining have all left their mark upon the slopes; and, here at least, it can be said that the accumulative effort of successive generations has unconsciously helped in the creation of one of the loveliest landscapes in the country.

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      The River Wharfe above Grassington at Ghaistrill’s Strid (Walk 5)

      Although numerous lanes and tracks wind deep into the heart of the Dales, it is only the leisurely freedom of pedestrian exploration that truly enables an appreciation of its unique charm. This, the first of two volumes, is a wanderer’s guide to the southern and western parts of the area, savouring its ups, downs and endless in-betweens. The various walks seek out spectacular viewpoints, dramatic landforms, curious natural features and attractive hamlets and villages, but more than that, simply delight in the subtly changing scenery. There is something for everyone, from gentle valley and hillside walks to more demanding upland romps that take in the high hills and remote moors of the hinterland. For the newcomer, this is an invaluable companion. In addition to the route descriptions there is background information to many of the features encountered along the way. While some routes are inevitably popular, many others take you off the beaten track to less oft-visited spots, and even those who know the Dales well may find new corners.

      The unique character and unquestionable charm of the Yorkshire Dales has its roots in the underlying bedrock, much of which was created during the Carboniferous period 300 million years ago. At a time when, in other areas, massive coal, gas and oil fields were being laid down in the accumulating detritus of humid forest swamps, the area which has become the Dales lay beneath a shallow tropical sea. Here, the broken shells of countless marine creatures settled to form a bed of limestone over two hundred metres thick. Known as the Great Scar Limestone, it dominates the scenery of the south western corner of the park and underlies its central core.

      Eventually, river deltas encroached from the north, washing mud and sand across the coastal shelf. But this was a period of cyclically changing sea levels, creating sequential strata of shale and weak sandstones, repeatedly topped off by limestone as lagoon conditions intermittently returned. Each band is only around twelve metres thick, but the build-up over aeons formed a kind of layer cake over three hundred metres deep. Known as the Yoredale Series, because of its appearance in the valley of the River Ure – Wensleydale – it forms the basis of the northern portion of the park and extends further south as the higher peaks and ridges. The upper levels of this layering culminate in a hard, impervious sandstone known as millstone grit reflecting one of its uses and the remnants of this form the southern hill tops and the high ground of the northern fells.

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      The dramatic rock wall of Malham Cove (Walk 20)

      Neatly laid down in horizontal bands, the whole area, known as the Askrigg Block, was subsequently uplifted by earth movement, putting the Carboniferous strata of the block far above the younger rocks that lie to the south. The block tilts gently backwards, and whereas weathering has exposed the older limestones in the south west of the area, the more recent Yoredale rocks remain on top to the north east. The lines of fracture are dramatically evident in the three main Craven Faults, which cut across the southern part of the National Park. Giggleswick Scar – the line of towering cliffs overlooking the B6480 west of Settle – is part of the South Craven Fault, which continues its line south east towards Skipton. The Mid-Craven Fault is marked by a long line of cliffs of which Malham Cove and Gordale Scar are a part, while the North Craven Fault runs parallel to it at the southern lip of Malham Tarn. In a few places, the limestone of the block has been worn away to expose rocks from an even earlier era, known as the Ordovician, which, unlike the even, Carboniferous formations, are extravagantly crumpled and consist of slates, grits and mudstones. They can be seen in the quarries of Ribblesdale and around Ingleton, and are also exposed as an impervious basement layer in the southern valleys, perhaps most vividly in Thornton Force and along the Ingleton Falls.

      The character of the Howgills clearly sets them apart from the rest of the Dales and, with the Middleton Fells, they are separated from the Askrigg Block by another fracture line – the Dent Fault. This runs in a rough north–south line east of Sedbergh, but here the displacement has been in the opposite direction, elevating the older rocks that lie to the west. Geologically these hills are part of the Lake District and are composed of much-folded metamorphosed slates and grits from the Silurian period, about a hundred million years older than the Carboniferous rocks making up the Askrigg Block. Their grassy flanks sweep steeply upwards from deep ravines to broad rounded tops, whose long interconnecting ridges, once attained, offer immensely satisfying walking.

      Some of the most spectacular scenery of the park is to be found in the areas dominated by the Great Scar Limestone – Malham Cove, Gordale, Kingsdale, Twisleton, Lower Ribblesdale and the middle reaches of Wharfedale. Towering lines of white cliffs and scars, shake holes, sinks, potholes, caves, disappearing and resurgent streams and rivers, dry valleys and waterfalls, clints and grikes are all features of this remarkable karst landscape. Overlooking the fault lines, the cliffs result from the upward movement of the Askrigg Block, but the terraces along the valley side are due to the relative resistance of different layers to erosive weathering. A similar picture is seen in the Yoredale Series, where the successive bands of limestone are comparatively harder than the intervening strata of sandstones, producing a stepped profile such as that vividly presented above Buckden. It is this same process that gives rise to the many spectacular waterfalls of the region, the water cascading over a lip of hard limestone, but undercutting into the softer rock which lies below.

      The most intriguing features of karst landscapes are those that result from the solubility of the bedrock in rain water. Its slight acidity dissolves the stone, exploiting crevices and vertical stress fractures and ultimately creating the awe-inspiring potholes and caves for which the area is famous. Whole rivers are swallowed into the ground, either in abruptly sensational falls such as Gaping Gill or merely ‘evaporating’ before your eyes as does the stream emanating from Malham Tarn or the River Skirfare in its passage through Littondale. Just as magical is their reappearance further down the valley, the river having coursed between the two points deep underground in dark and constricted passages and fissures that are the province of intrepid potholers and cave divers. In places, some dramatic passages are sufficiently accessible to have been opened as show caves, allowing visitors to marvel at the fantastic stalactites, stalagmites and other formations created as incessant drips of the lime-rich water have evaporated over millennia leaving the lime behind. Occasionally, similar deposits are also seen on the surface in the form of tufa, where calcite is precipitated from the cascading water.

      While streams, even after rain, are something of a rarity on the limestone uplands, dry valleys are not. Like Trow Gill and Conistone Dib they

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