Fountains Fell Tarn
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Fountains Fell Tarn, is an upland lake between the two peaks of Fountains Fell, in North Yorkshire, England. The tarn is close to the Pennine Way, some north west of Malham Tarn, and east of Horton in Ribblesdale. Water from the tarn flows eastwards through Cowside Beck, which is a tributary of the
River Skirfare River Skirfare is a small river in North Yorkshire, England, that flows through Littondale and ends where it joins the larger River Wharfe. The source is the confluence of Foxup Beck and Cosh Beck at the hamlet of Foxup. The name is of Old N ...
in Littondale. Whilst the water in the lake is acidic, as it runs off the mountain, it flows over Yoredale beds limestone and so becomes a harder (more alkaline) water.


Description

Fountains Fell Tarn occupies a shallow basin created by glacial activity in the Devensian age, which scoured the limestone away. Malham Tarn was created in a similar fashion with the removal of the porous limestone allowing water to collect. Although the tarn does not have a permanent outflow (the inflow of water almost matching that of the evaporation), in times of heavy precipitation, water from the tarn drains eastwards as Cowside Beck, an affluent of the River Skirfare in Littondale. The water at the tarn site is mostly unaffected by limestone, being quite acidic from the local peat, and the underlying rock of millstone grit, instead of limestone, which results in the water having a hardness value of between 3–5. However, the underlying rocks which the water drains across are limestone of the Yoredale beds and Great Scar limestone, from which the water absorbs alkalinity, so by the time it reaches the water draining off Darnbrook Fell, its hardness is rated somewhere between 19 and 25. Fountains Fell has two peaks, at the north, and at the south. The tarn sits between the two peaks at a height of above sea level, and north west of Malham Tarn and east of Horton-in-Ribblesdale. The tarn lies fairly shallow on a flat plateau among the eroding peat bog (which supplies its acidity). The bottom of the tarn was recorded in the 1950s as being largely composed of sand with some peat encroachment. Although the tarn is on average just deep, it is estimated to have an average volume of . It is often frozen for long periods of time during the winter due to its height near the summit of Fountains Fell. Between 1949 and 1955, snow was recorded to have fallen on average of 47 days every year and an average air temperature of . By the period of 1992 to 1997, the average air temperature had risen to with at least 129 days of cloud cover in 1995. Water bugs and water beetles were found to be present in the tarn, but freshwater shrimp (gammarus pulex) was absent. This was attributed to the low calcium levels in the tarn, as the species was abundant in the streams and becks draining from it. The tarn is accessible from the Pennine Way, which runs across Fountains Fell to the east of the tarn.


Water pH values

Fountains Fell Tarn's inflow is precipitation, whereas, most of the water in Malham Tarn has arrived from streams and becks which flow over limestone, accruing alkalinity as it travels over the bedrock.


Naming

The tarn is named after the mountain it is located on; Fountains Fell. This was first recorded as Fountains Fell in 1540, named after Fountains Abbey who owned the sheep pasture rights on the mountain. The first written record of the name ''Fountains Fell Tarn'', was in 1858, with the word tarn, a commonplace name for upland lakes, deriving from the Old Scandinavian ''tjǫrn''. On the road through Silverdale, between Pen-y-ghent and Fountains Fell, to Halton Gill, lies the Ulfkil Cross base. The cross records the boundary between Stainforth and Malham Moors townships, and in written records lists the mountain (Fountains Fell as ''Gnup'') and the tarn as ''Suartecumbe''. Sometimes the lake is recorded as ''Fountains Tarn''.


See also

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List of lakes and tarns in North Yorkshire This is a list of lakes and tarns in North Yorkshire, England. Unlike the nearby Lake District, North Yorkshire does not have many natural lakes due to the porosity of the limestone underneath the surface. The JNCC Special Area of Conservation ...


Notes


References


Sources

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External links


Profile of the tarn on My Yorkshire Dales
{{Lakes in Yorkshire Glacial lakes Lakes of North Yorkshire