Footpath Erosion

Post on 16-Jan-2015

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Pen y Ghent as an exemplar. Tourism and how it causes footpath erosion and some management strategies used.

Transcript of Footpath Erosion

Pen y Ghent

Footpath Erosion

Ingleborough- the Three Peaks

Yorkshire Dales

Pen y Ghent, is on the Three Peaks walk

Main Routeway - Primary

New SecondaryFuture ?

Bracken bottom

New steps opening up path

The pole is 1.5 m high how much material has been

removed?

Estimate

Scaleof scar

Tripartite

Puddling, compaction, pinchpont

Precipitation increases with altitude

Damage = Tourism?

Walkers take the ‘Dark Path’

Bank Erosion indicates width

of bypass

Cycles exacerbate

the problem

Natural pinch point deepened by

limestone clints

Full width erosion

Pinch point outcome?

Alternative Paths

Altitude increases and so does MANAGEMENT

PROCESSIncrease height

Decrease TemperatureIncrease Precipitation

Limestone Scar

Managed Path

Unmanaged =

Puddling

Limestone blocks

Scale

CrossDrainage

Why?

PlasticAlternative

Sandstone blocks

Review

• Erosion increases with altitude• High visitor numbers on popular walks • Management solutions possible• Expensive and some consider ugly

• Pen y Ghent comprises of alternate layers – Sandstone and Carboniferous Limestone

maryvan@supanet.com

http://www.crclink.co.uk/

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I give freelyand you are welcome to use this Presentation, in your class to spreadthe wonderful message geography gives. Downloads are often in the hundreds and I am sometimes asked if a donation can be given. The school and village sends and receives children from Tanzania on a two yearly basis and I like to help with their fundraising. If you have saved this power point or tucked it away to use next year and could make a donation that would be fantastic; the same as it might cost you for a tune for your I pod, say 49p. If you want to use it for lots of classes and keep for each year how about 99p. If only half of the down-loaders give we could raise the £1500 it needs to build a class room in Tanzania.

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Born in St Bees, February 2010 by MO @ sbs

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