Three Counties System

Three Counties System

Duke Street in Ireby Fell Cavern II
Map showing the location of Three Counties System
Location North-West England
Coordinates 54°12′25″N 2°30′23″W / 54.20699°N 2.506452°W / 54.20699; -2.506452Coordinates: 54°12′25″N 2°30′23″W / 54.20699°N 2.506452°W / 54.20699; -2.506452
Depth 253 metres (830 ft)[1]
Length about 86.7 kilometres (54 mi)[2]
Geology Carboniferous limestone
Entrances 53 [3]
Difficulty Various
Hazards Various
Access Various[4]

The Three Counties System is a set of inter-connected limestone solutional cave systems spanning the borders of Cumbria, Lancashire, and North Yorkshire in the north of England. The possibility of connecting a number of discrete cave systems in the area to create a single super-system that spans the county borders was first proposed by Dave Brook in 1968, and it was achieved in 2011. The system is currently over 86 kilometres (53 mi) long, making it the longest in the UK and the twenty seventh longest in the world, and there continues to be scope for considerably extending the system.[1]

Description

The Three Counties System most southerly entrance is currently Large Pot (54°11′11″N 2°29′18″W / 54.186439°N 2.488420°W / 54.186439; -2.488420, NGR SD 6281 7685) on the northerly flank of Kingsdale in North Yorkshire, and the most northerly entrance is currently Bull Pot of the Witches (54°13′35″N 2°31′10″W / 54.226398°N 2.519514°W / 54.226398; -2.519514, NGR SD 6623 8131) beneath Barbon Low Fell in Cumbria – a distance of almost 5 kilometres (3 mi). Between the two, the system passes beneath Ireby Fell and Leck Fell which are in Lancashire.

The system runs mainly north-south, its western extent being limited by the Craven Fault which truncates the limestone exposure, and the eastern extent where the limestones are conformable overlain by younger rocks. Streams flow from the higher topography from the east and sink into swallet holes at the edge of the limestone.[5] The Three Counties System contains a number of major subterranean streams, all of which combine to resurge at Leck Beck Head above Cowan Bridge. At the northern end, swallets in Barbondale close to the Dent Fault drain south-west through Bull Pot of the Witches, and the water enters the Ease Gill Caverns system in Lancaster Hole; most of Ease Gill Beck to the south drains into the extensive Ease Gill Caverns, although some drains into Link Pot and thus into the bottom of Pippikin Pot; most of Leck Fell drains into the Leck Fell Master Cave, which is part of Lost Johns' Cave, although some drains into Gavel Pot, and some into Notts Pot; Ireby Fell in the south drains into Notts Pot. All these streams eventually reach the phreatic zone where exploration is only possible by cave diving.[6] Some small streams in the south of The Three Counties System are known to resurge at Keld Head in Kingsdale, the next valley to the south.

The system is very complex, with sections formed at different times when the landscape topography and drainage patterns were different from today. Some of the system is believed to pre-date the Anglian glaciation which started at about 478 ka,[7] with one stalagmite in Lancaster Hole being dated to over 350,000 years old, whilst other sections are still being formed today.[8] Waltham has identified five distinct phases of development.[9] The Leck Beck Catchment Area Site of Special Scientific Interest, which is based around the catchment area of the Three Counties System, states in its reason for notification: "The scale and variety of the caves makes this a most important site for the study of surface and underground landform development over a long period of the recent past."[10] It is the interconnections between the sections that are the key to the existence of the super-system.[11]

The Three Counties System is 253 metres (830 ft) deep. The highest point is the entrance to Large Pot which is at an altitude of 402 metres (1,319 ft), and the lowest point is in Gavel Pot where the upstream sump has been dived to a depth of −64 metres (−210 ft), an altitude of 149 metres (489 ft).[12]

Major Cave Systems

Wilf Taylor's Passage, Lancaster Hole

The Three Counties System is composed of a number of smaller cave systems, some with multiple entrances. Whether or not a particular cave qualifies as a system in its own right is somewhat arbitrary, and arguments can be made for excluding some and including others. Running broadly from south to north, the systems include:

History

Most of the individual systems that make up the Three Counties System had been explored to a greater or lesser extent a long time before the possibility of an extended system was mooted. Thus Lost Johns' Cave was explored by the Yorkshire Ramblers' Club in the 1920s, the Ease Gill Caverns System by a number of caving clubs from the time of the original discovery of Lancaster Hole in 1946, and Ireby Fell Cavern in 1949.

The existence for the Three Counties System was first mooted by Dave Brook in 1968, when he proposed that the many fragmented systems stretching from Barbondale in the north, to Kingsdale in the south, could be part of a much larger system.[6] Over the next 43 years, many discoveries by many cavers gradually knitted the fragments together, but the two most significant dates were 30 May 2010 when Rift Pot was connected to Ireby Fell Cavern linking systems of North Yorkshire and Lancashire for the first time, and 6 November 2011, when Notts II was linked to Lost Johns' Cave, which was when the northern part of the system including caves in Cumbria, was connected to the southern part of the system including caves in Lancashire.

Fifteen cavers have lost their lives in the Three Counties System.

Chronology

This chronology includes the date of the original explorations of the major systems; the dates when two systems were linked; and deaths that have occurred in the system.

A caver descending a 25-metre (82 ft) shaft in Notts Pot

Future prospects

Although Dave Brook's vision for the Three Counties System has come to fruition, there is considerable scope for extending it in both directions. To the north in Barbondale, Aygill Caverns is known to drain into Bull Pot of the Witches, but a route through the underwater passages has yet to be negotiated. This would add 2.5 kilometres (1.6 mi) to the total system.[55] Further north still, a major abandoned route in Aygill Cavers known as New Year Passage, heads up the Barbondale valley, and may connect with other known caves.[56] To the south, explorations in Large Pot have extended the current system to within 500 metres (1,600 ft) of Kingsdale Beck.[57] Marble Steps, a major active system with large fossil fragments, could well be connected to Rift Pot. Marble Steps, some of Large Pot, and Low Douk Cave are all known to drain to Keld Head – a connection by diving would integrate both the West Kingsdale System (9 kilometres (5.6 mi) long) and the East Kingsdale System (7 kilometres (4.3 mi) long) into the system.[6]

References

  1. 1 2 Gulden, Bob. "World's Longest Caves". Retrieved 16 December 2012.
  2. Allen, Tim (October–November 2014). "The Longest Cave". Descent (240): 36.
  3. Gardner, John. "The Three Counties System – A List Of Entrances". Retrieved 20 July 2015.
  4. "Caving Access: Three Counties System & the North West". Council of Northern Caving Clubs. Retrieved 16 December 2012.
  5. Waltham, A.C. (1974). Limestone and Caves of North-West England. Newton Abbot: David and Charles. pp. 273–275. ISBN 0715361813.
  6. 1 2 3 4 Brook, Dave (September 1968). "The Three Counties System". University Speleological Association Review (3): 15–19.
  7. Waltham, Tony; Murphy, Phil (2013). Waltham, Tony; Lowe, David, eds. Caves and Karst of the Yorkshire Dales. Buxton: British Cave Research Association. p. 142. ISBN 978-0-900265-46-4.
  8. Gascoyne, M; Ford, D.C. (July 1984). "Uranium Series Dating of Speletherms, Part II Results from the Yorkshire Dales and Implications for Cave Development and Quaternary Climates" (PDF). Cave Science:Transactions of the British Cave Research Association. 11 (2): 65–84. Retrieved 24 July 2015.
  9. Waltham, A.C. (1974). Limestone and Caves of North-West England. Newton Abbot: David and Charles. p. 285. ISBN 0715361813.
  10. "Leck Beck Catchment Area". Natural England. Retrieved 24 July 2015.
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  13. 1 2 Cuttriss, S.W. (1922). "The Leck Fell Pot-Holes". Yorkshire Ramblers' Club Journal. Leeds: YRC. 5 (15): 60–64. Retrieved 14 July 2015.
  14. YRC Committee (1900). "Club Proceedings". Yorkshire Ramblers' Club Journal. Leeds: YRC. 1 (2): 134–141.
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  16. The Editor (1934). "Rumbling Hole, Leck Fell,". Yorkshire Ramblers' Club Journal. Leeds: YRC. 6 (21): 229–234. Retrieved 11 July 2015.
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Sources

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