Global Information Lookup Global Information

Cave Dale information


Cave Dale
The view from the top of the steep section
Cave Dale is located in Derbyshire
Cave Dale
Cave Dale
Location in Derbyshire
Lengthc.1.2 kilometres (0.75 mi)
Geography
LocationCastleton, Derbyshire
CountryEngland
Coordinates53°20′19″N 1°46′40″W / 53.3386°N 1.7777°W / 53.3386; -1.7777

Cave Dale (sometimes spelt Cavedale) is a dry limestone valley in the Derbyshire Peak District, England. It is located at grid reference SK149824. The northern end of the dale starts at the village of Castleton where the valley sides are almost perpendicular and over 50 metres (160 ft) in height. The dale rises gently after leaving Castleton for approximately 200 metres (220 yd) before becoming steeper culminating in a fine viewpoint down the dale taking in Peveril Castle with Lose Hill behind (see picture). After the viewpoint the dale swings west and levels out with gentle gradients, becoming just a shallow depression as it peters out onto the open pastureland between Castleton and Chapel-en-le-Frith.[1]

Cave Dale was initially formed by glacial meltwater carving a deep narrow valley in the local soluble limestone. The river then found a route underground leaving a dry valley with caverns underneath. Later on the caverns below Cave Dale collapsed making the valley even deeper and gorge-like at the northern end. The Castleton entrance to Cave Dale had a narrow natural arch as recently as 200 years ago, a relic of the roof collapse.[2] The lower slopes of the dale have large amounts of scree, frost on the higher limestone cliffs having caused the rock to shatter.[3] Halfway up the valley is an outcrop of basaltic lava with a few small columns.[4] Although relatively small, the lava bed forms a hydrological barrier, creating an 'umbrella' effect in Peak Cavern below, preventing speleothem production beneath the bed.

The northern part of Cave Dale near Castleton

A bridleway runs the entire length of the dale, part of the Limestone Way footpath which travels 80 kilometres from Castleton to Rocester in Staffordshire.[5] Cave Dale is accessed through a narrow rocky opening almost from the centre of Castleton, and Peveril Castle is seen high up on the almost vertical western slopes. The Normans chose this site because the steep sides of Cave Dale gave a natural defence and good lookout.

The chambers and caves of Peak Cavern run directly below Cave Dale and any small streams in the dale quickly disappear into the ground down limestone fissures and into the caverns beneath. Mineral veins can also be seen within the limestone of the dale. The cliffs at the northern end of Cave Dale are used by rock climbers and there are several routes in the Very Severe category. There are several small caves or old lead mines within the dale's limestone walls, one being larger than the rest with bars preventing access, as it is the ventilation fan outlet for Peak Cavern. Cave Dale's steep north-facing grassy slopes are damp and bryophyte-rich and are dominated by oat grass (Trisetum flavescent) and sheep's fescue (Festuca ovina). Lesser meadow-rue (Thalictrum minus) grows extensively on ledges in the dale.[6]

At the southwestern extremity of the dale as it merges into the moorland between Castleton and Peak Forest are the remains of several old lead mines. The Hazard Mine lies at grid reference SK136812, and was one of the major mines of the area. Over 5000 tonnes of lead ore were mined and the workings once went down to 700 feet (210 m), though the main shaft is now only 80m deep after internal collapses. The Hollandtwine Mine lies 250 metres (820 ft) to the east but the shaft top was destroyed and buried during fluorspar quarrying in the 1990s, and access is no longer possible. Drainage from both mines went directly into Peak Cavern.[7]

In 1983 Cave Dale was the scene of the murder of a 21-year-old Manchester Polytechnic student, Susan Renhard. Norman Smith, a local 17-year-old, was subsequently jailed for life at Nottingham Crown Court in 1984.

Cave Dale features in the films The Princess Bride (1987) and The Other Boleyn Girl (2008).[8]

  1. ^ OL1 Dark Peak area (Map). 1:25000. Explorer. Southampton: Ordnance Survey. 2 February 2009. ISBN 978-0-319-24067-0.
  2. ^ "Castleton". Peak District Information. Retrieved 18 April 2020.
  3. ^ Ford 2002, p. 70.
  4. ^ Ford 2002, p. 82.
  5. ^ "Limestone Way". Long Distance Walkers Association. Retrieved 18 April 2020.
  6. ^ "Castleton SSSI" (PDF). English Nature. 9 October 1987.
  7. ^ Ford & Rieuwerts 1983, p. 46–47.
  8. ^ "The Other Boleyn Girl". Visit Peak District & Derbyshire. Archived from the original on 19 February 2011. Retrieved 18 April 2020.

and 26 Related for: Cave Dale information

Request time (Page generated in 0.8178 seconds.)

Cave Dale

Last Update:

Cave Dale (sometimes spelt Cavedale) is a dry limestone valley in the Derbyshire Peak District, England. It is located at grid reference SK149824. The...

Word Count : 755

Nutty Putty Cave

Last Update:

popular among Boy Scout troops and college students. The cave, first explored in 1960 by Dale Green and friends, is currently owned by the Utah School...

Word Count : 1110

Yorkshire Dales

Last Update:

Pen-y-ghent (694 m (2,277 ft)). The extensive cave systems are a major area for caving in the UK. The word dale, like dell, is derived from the Old English...

Word Count : 2493

Allegory of the cave

Last Update:

Plato's Cave". Kant-Studien. 58 (2): 138. doi:10.1515/kant.1967.58.1-4.137. S2CID 170201374. Hall, Dale (January 1980). "Interpreting Plato's Cave as an...

Word Count : 2872

List of dales in the Peak District

Last Update:

Bradfield Dale Brierlow Dale Cales Dale Cave Dale Chee Dale Coombs Dale Cow Dale Cressbrook Dale Cunning Dale Dam Dale Darley Dale Deep Dale Deep Dale (Taddington...

Word Count : 349

White Scar Caves

Last Update:

White Scar Caves is a show cave in the civil parish of Ingleton, North Yorkshire, England, under Ingleborough in the Chapel-le-Dale valley of the Yorkshire...

Word Count : 184

List of UK caving fatalities

Last Update:

up to 4,000 regular cavers in the UK, and about 70,000 people who went on instructor-led courses into caves in the Yorkshire Dales, but there were no fatalities...

Word Count : 2557

Susan Renhard

Last Update:

Elizabeth Renhard (17 November 1961 – 27 June 1983) was a student murdered in Cave Dale near Castleton, Derbyshire in 1983. Norman Hugh Morrison Smith, a young...

Word Count : 3030

House of the Dragon

Last Update:

Cove. Other locations included Castleton, Derbyshire, in areas such as Cave Dale, Eldon Hill Quarry and the Market Place. Some scenes were shot in Aldershot...

Word Count : 12165

Cave painting

Last Update:

archaeology, cave paintings are a type of parietal art (which category also includes petroglyphs, or engravings), found on the wall or ceilings of caves. The...

Word Count : 7248

Lathkill Dale

Last Update:

below Lathkill Head Cave (or, in wet conditions, from the cave itself). Towards the head of the dale is the side valley Cales Dale. The river valley is...

Word Count : 907

Peak Cavern

Last Update:

accessed by cavers, and a ventilation system here expels cave air to surface at Cave Dale. There have since been efforts to return this area of cave to a more...

Word Count : 1266

Peveril Castle

Last Update:

centre of the barony. The castle has views across the Hope Valley and Cave Dale. William Peveril the Younger inherited his father's estates, but in 1155...

Word Count : 3677

Cave Rescue Organisation

Last Update:

The Cave Rescue Organisation (CRO) is a voluntary body based in the caving area of the Yorkshire Dales in northern England. Founded in 1935, it is the...

Word Count : 224

Mammoth Cave National Park

Last Update:

Mammoth Cave National Park is a national park in south-central Kentucky, US. It encompasses portions of Mammoth Cave, the longest known cave system in...

Word Count : 7843

Limestone Way

Last Update:

route runs up Cave Dale, past the village of Peak Forest, down Hay Dale (shared with the Peak District Boundary Walk) and along Peter Dale. It then runs...

Word Count : 860

Cave of Altamira

Last Update:

The Cave of Altamira (/ˌæltəˈmɪərə/ AL-tə-MEER-ə; Spanish: Cueva de Altamira [ˈkweβa ðe altaˈmiɾa]) is a cave complex, located near the historic town...

Word Count : 2347

List of places with columnar jointed volcanics

Last Update:

Samson's ribs, Scotland Fingal's Cave and Staffa, Scotland Pen Anglas, Pembrokeshire, Wales Ulva, Scotland Cave Dale, Castleton, Peak District North Mountain...

Word Count : 2338

Eldon Hill

Last Update:

south or Castleton to the north. The approach from Castleton goes up Cave Dale with a return down Winnats Pass to give a very interesting walk. The approach...

Word Count : 818

Mossdale Caverns

Last Update:

Mossdale Caverns is a cave system in the Yorkshire Dales, England. It is about 5 kilometres (3.1 mi) north of Grassington, and east of Conistone, where...

Word Count : 907

Caves of Meghalaya

Last Update:

Daly 2013, p. 40. "Scuttle Flies (Diptera: Phoridae) from Caves in Meghalaya, India" (PDF). Journal of Cave and Karst Studies. "2015 Meghalaya Caving...

Word Count : 962

Caving in the United Kingdom

Last Update:

Ingleborough Cave in the Yorkshire Dales, and Marble Arch Caves in County Fermanagh. The British Caving Association is the national body for caving in the United...

Word Count : 2070

Deep Dale

Last Update:

Deep Dale is a short steep-sided gorge near Buxton, Derbyshire, in the Peak District of England. It is distinct from another Deep Dale, near Sheldon,...

Word Count : 696

Cave research in India

Last Update:

Kharpran Daly) which mainly involved in the caving and cave explorations of the existing caves of the state Meghalaya. Akka Mahadevi Cavesetc. Belum Caves, length:...

Word Count : 1970

Limey Way

Last Update:

reference SK150829 Cave Dale Hurdlow Barn Old Moor Peak Forest – SK114793 Dam Dale Hay Dale Wheston – SK133763 Monk's Dale Millers Dale Cressbrook Mill –...

Word Count : 213

Subterranean waterfall

Last Update:

Phil (2013). Waltham, Tony; Lowe, Dave (eds.). Caves and Karst of the Yorkshire Dales. Buxton: British Cave Research Association. p. 136. ISBN 978-0900265-46-4...

Word Count : 226

PDF Search Engine © AllGlobal.net