Appleby Fells

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Appleby Fells
On Burton Fell - geograph.org.uk - 19145.jpg
Part of the SSSI - looking from Burton Fell towards Roman Fell
Location relief map United Kingdom Eden.svg
Red pog.svg
Appleby Fells
Location in Eden, Cumbria
Cumbria UK relief location map.jpg
Red pog.svg
Appleby Fells
Location in Cumbria, England
Location Eden, Cumbria, North West England
Coordinates 54°37′12″N2°22′21″W / 54.62000°N 2.37250°W / 54.62000; -2.37250
Area10,634.7 ha (41.061 sq mi)
Established1951
Governing body Natural England
Website Map of site

Appleby Fells is a Site of Special Scientific Interest in Westmorland and Furness, Cumbria, England, near Appleby-in-Westmorland. [1] The area is approximately a triangle with a right angle in the North East at Cow Green Reservoir. It extends westwards to near Knock and southwards to near Helbeck. The area overlaps the North Pennines AONB. The fells rise steeply above the Eden Valley, the scarp slope being deeply dissected by streams. Natural England states that "the great importance of the area lies in its rich variety of habitats and associated plant and animal species" and that "geologically there are important exposures of the Great Whin Sill quartz dolerite". [1] According to data from Natural England [2] the condition of 93% of the SSSI is designated "Unfavourable Recovering" and less than 5% is "Favourable".

Contents

Part of the land area designated as Appleby Fells SSSI is owned by the Ministry of Defence. The protected area includes part of Warcop Training Area. [3]

Flora

There is blanket bog above about 540 m (1,770 ft), a mire dominated by hares-tail cotton grass and heather. Some peaty pools exist with Sphagnum mosses in hummocks and some bog asphodel and round-leaved sundew. In places there are carboniferous limestone crags and the grassland here is dominated by sheep's fescue, with some crested hair-grass and blue moor-grass. Forbs here include typical limestone species such as wild thyme, mountain pansy, mossy saxifrage, moonwort, limestone bedstraw, alpine scurvy-grass, alpine forget-me-not and spring gentian. [1]

The scree areas have a different flora, and the inaccessible ledges on the crags, and in the cracks in the limestone pavement of Middle Fell and Musgrave Scar, have some taller plants such as, Pimpinella saxifraga, mountain St-John's wort, vernal sandwort, alpine pennycress, hoary whitlow grass, lesser meadow rue and the uncommon Pyrenean scurvy-grass. On the acidic eastern slopes of the escarpment there is heathland dominated by bilberry and crowberry Vaccinium-Empetrum. [1]

Fauna

The pools and tarns provide habitat for waders including golden plover, dunlin, snipe, oystercatcher, common sandpiper and redshank, and there are also birds of prey such as merlin, peregrine falcon, raven and barn owl. Mine shafts are used by hibernating Brandt's bats and whiskered bats. [1]

Watercourses

The becks on the Appleby Fells provide headwaters for several catchments:

Monuments

English Heritage [4] data shows that the area includes nine scheduled monuments including prehistoric stone hut circles, field systems, cairns, shielings, and a Romano-British farmstead. It also includes the Scordale Lead Mines. [5]

Catchment Data Explorer

  1. "Burthwaite Beck". Environment Agency.
  2. "Cow Green Reservoir". Environment Agency.
  3. "Hilton Beck". Environment Agency.
  4. "Long Grain from Source to Lune". Environment Agency.
  5. "Low Gill (Crooks Beck)". Environment Agency.
  6. "Lune from Source to Long Grain". Environment Agency.
  7. "Maize Beck from Source to River Tees". Environment Agency.
  8. "Swindale Beck nr Dufton". Environment Agency.
  9. "Swindale Beck (Brough)". Environment Agency.
  10. "Tees from Trout Beck to Maize Beck". Environment Agency.
  11. "Trout Beck (Murton)". Environment Agency.

References