Geological faulting across the Craven District of North Yorkshire, England
The Craven Fault System is the name applied by geologists to the group of crustalfaults in the Pennines[1] that form the southern edge of the Askrigg Block and which partly bounds the Craven Basin. Sections of the system's component faults which include the North, Middle and South Craven faults and the Feizor Fault[2] are evident at the surface in the form of degraded faults scarps where Carboniferous Limestone abuts millstone grit. The fault system is approximately coincident with the southwestern edge of the Yorkshire Dales National Park and the northeastern edge of the Bowland Fells.
The Craven Gap is sometimes called the Aire Gap, but to do so necessitates including the Aire Fault; that runs from the south end of the South Craven Fault: from Gargrave towards Leeds. Although of less amplitude than the three Craven faults the course of the Aire Fault is made more apparent by the River Aire. The broad Aire Gap separates the Yorkshire Dales from the Bowland Fells and the Millstone Grit plateaux of the South Pennines.[5]
Geological age
The fault system comprises the North Craven Fault, Middle Craven Fault, South Craven Fault and Feizor Fault along with various other unnamed faults. The Middle Craven Fault moved mainly during Carboniferous times and marks the southern limit of the Askrigg Block. However the North and South Craven faults continued to be active into post-Triassic times.[4]: 16 The Great Scar Limestone is exposed north of the Middle Craven Fault at Malham Cove and at Gordale Scar[5] and along the South Craven Fault at Giggleswick Scar.
Erosion
The Great Scar Limestone is over 200 metres thick and the overlying Yoredale Series was over 300 metres thick before weathering.[7]: 12 The vertical throw of the fault zone is up to 1,800 m (5,906 ft).
Near Ingleton, North Yorkshire the North Craven Fault has a downthrow of about 200 metres (660 ft), and a few hundred yards away the South Craven Fault has a downthrow of about 1,200 metres (3,900 ft).[8] The fault plane of the North Craven Fault is exposed in Swilla Glen.[9]
Charles Darwin used the Craven Fault to illustrate how nature can so well conceal dramatic events: "The Craven Fault, for instance, extends for upwards of 30 miles, and along this line the vertical displacement of strata has varied from 600 to 3000 feet."[10]
^[1] British Geological Survey, Geology of England and IOM, DiGMapGB625, data NERC 2008
^ abWilson, Alfred (1992). Geology of the Yorkshire Dales National Park. Grassington: Yorkshire Dales National Park Committee. p. 2. ISBN0-905455-34-7.
^ abDonkin, Kevin (2006). Circular Walks Along the Pennine Way. London: Frances Lincoln Ltd. ISBN978-0-7112-2665-4.
CPGS (2003). "Ingleton Waterfalls trail"(PDF). Craven and Pendle Geological Society. Archived from the original(PDF) on 12 May 2013. Retrieved 5 March 2014.
Waltham, Tony (2007). The Yorkshire Dales Landscape and Geology. Marlborough: Crowood Press Ltd. ISBN978-1-86126-972-0.
External links
"The Craven Fault". www.yorkshire-dales.com. Retrieved 14 September 2009.