The Orton Fells, located to the
east of Lake District, in Cumbria County, in England. This is an area of
amazing geology, bounded by the small villages of Orton, Great Asby, Little
Asby, Crosby Ravensworth and Crosby Garret. This area contains some of the most
captivating limestone outcrops, scars and pavements in Great Britain. The
amazing limestone pavements are areas of flat, uncovered and weathered
limestone rock surfaces. However, abrasion by glaciers as well as natural
weathering of the limestone has formed deep fissures, which has broken the
pavement into blocks that seems as if they were sculpted by human hands.
Therefore, most of pavements were damaged by mining over the centuries. The
Great Asby Scar, near the village of Great Asby, and Orton Scars, near Orton,
comprise some of the best enduring examples in Britain. The limestone rocks in
these pavements were created during the Carboniferous era some 350 million
years ago. In the ancient times, this region was under the sea, hence walking
across the limestone pavement you can still find fossils of the ancient corals,
shelly creatures and sea lilies from which the rock is made.
This is the most extensive area
of pavements in the UK outside the Ingleborough area in Yorkshire. Most of the landscape is protected by both
Site of Special Scientific Interest and candidate, and it is Special area of
Conservation designations because of its international importance. Moreover,
during the last ice age, the limestone was enclosed by an ice sheet several
hundreds of meters thick that scarred the limestone bedrock. So, when the ice
melted, it left sediment on top of the rock which was colonized by trees and
plants as the weather conditions warmed. Further, water running through the
soil found softness in the rocks that were then eroded away becoming deep
fissures. The water also left channels and hollows in the rock, which were bare
as the soil was washed away over thousands of years. Thus, these runnels and
pits now make up the lovely and complex patterns that can be seen on the Orton
Fells pavements. The deep fissures are home to a number of plants and ferns
where they remain protected from grazing animals and the drying effect of the
wind. Moreover, many invertebrates, including spiders also use the fissures of
the limestone pavement to string their webs across to catch insects.
The birdlife found on the Orton
Fells is typical of upland pastureland.
Meadow pipits and wheatears breed on the grassland surrounding the
pavements with wrens actually nesting among the limestone outcrops. Thus, buzzards, ravens and kestrels are seen often,
as are curlews, golden plover and lapwings.
Moreover, skylarks can be heard singing during the spring and summer
months. There are few mammals found on the pavement. Rabbits are the only animals you are likely
to see during the day, but foxes, stoats and moles are all known to use the
area. The pavements are home to many invertebrates, including spiders that use the
grikes of the limestone pavement to string their webs across to catch insects.
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