button to main menu  Otley's Guide 1823 (5th edn 1834)

button title page
button previous page button next page
Page 162:-
Witherslack, Cartmel, Dalton and Millum, from whence for some distance its place is occupied by the sea, and in the neighbourhood of Gosforth and Calder Bridge, a red sandstone intervenes, so that the limestone is either wanting or buried under more recent formations. It dips from the mountains on every side, but with different degrees of inclination; the declivity being generally least on the southern side. In the neighbourhood of Witherslack it forms lofty isolated ridges, while the subjacent slaty rock appears in the lower ground: and it may be seen upon the surface as far as Warton and Farleton Crags, and even as far as Kellet, before it is covered by the sandstone of the coal measures. A remarkable exception, however, occurs in Holker Park, where the mountain rock is succeeded by limestone, and that by sandstone and shale, resembling that which accompanies coal - all within a very short distance. On the north and west of the mountains, the inclination of the newer rocks appears to be greater and the strata thinner; so that the clay-slate of the first division is succeeded by limestone, sandstone and coal, all in the distance of two or three miles. The principal mineral production of this limestone, is iron ore, which is raised in great quantities near Dalton, and also near Egremont.
On external parts of this circle various sandstones and coal succeed each other. At Bolton in Cumberland, the stratification appears to be mantle-shaped round the hill at Catlands, so that the lime-
gazetteer links
button -- Calder Bridge
button -- Cartmel Fell
button -- "Catlands" -- Catlands Hill
button -- "Dalton" -- Dalton-in-Furness
button -- Egremont
button -- "Farlton Knot" -- Farleton Knott
button -- Gosforth
button -- Holker Park
button -- "Millum" -- Millom
button -- Warton Crag
button -- Witherslack
button next page

button to main menu Lakes Guides menu.