Grough recently published an
article on the survey of Yr Wyddfa / Snowdon conducted by G&J Surveys. The original article and a link to it on the
Grough website appear below.
The survey of Wales’ highest
mountain was covered in an ITV Wales programme broadcast at 7.30pm on Tuesday
14th October 2014 and entitled ‘Snowdon: Climbing New Heights’.
The survey benefited from the
help given by a number of people and organisations. Thanks to Stephen Edwards (CREAD Cyf, Producer),
Aled Llŷr (Slam Media, Director), Mark Greaves and the Ordnance Survey, Snowdon
Mountain Railway and ITV Wales.
Hill sleuths attempt to get to bottom of confusion
on Snowdon's height
Sunset on Snowdon's summit |
Have you ever wondered why Scotland and
England’s highest mountains are blessed by two summit heights on Ordnance
Survey maps?
Both have what OS considers man-made
additions to their tops, and the lower of the two figures is the height of the
‘natural’ bit of the mountain rather than the height of the artificial cairn,
which is in brackets.
But we all climb those cairns anyway,
don’t we?
Well, it could be that Wales’s highest
peak Snowdon might be about to join Ben Nevis and Scafell Pike in the same
bracket club.
At first it appeared Yr Wyddfa might be
up for a metre’s worth of promotion, but Britain’s national mapping agency is
very strict about what constitutes a mountain’s top.
The trio of amateur hills sleuths who
lug their very professional GPS measuring equipment to various mountains had their
eye on Snowdon for a while. John Barnard, Graham Jackson and Myrddyn Phillips
escaped the Snowdonia crowds for a night on one of the UK’s best trodden peaks.
This is their story of how difficult it
is to get to the bottom of what is the highest point in Wales.
Snowdon is one of the most iconic
mountains in Britain. More than 400,000 people a year find their way to its
summit; it is also one of the most visited mountain tops anywhere in the world.
It is also a mountain top that has experienced man’s intrusion on a multitude
of occasions.
Man’s interference with the summit area
of Snowdon is centuries old as legend has it that the mountain’s Welsh name of
Yr Wyddfa is associated with the burial mound of a giant named Rhita Gawr.
In more recent times the Royal
Engineers built a substantial cairn on the summit which was added to later in
the 19th century. Early photographs from the time show this cairn as a huge
neat pile of stones dwarfing people sitting on its top and vying for dominance
over the summit buildings that had started to appear on Wales’s highest
mountain.
Snowdon: the height remains the same, but the climb just got bigger |
These summit buildings which were once
described as ‘hotels’, at one time one stood opposite another as vast tracts of
the summit area were levelled to site each building. Victorian visitors rode to
the summit and stables were built there to accommodate their horses.
Then along came the mountain railway
and the later addition of a summit cafe which greatly expanded the
accessibility of this already popular mountain.
The present summit cafe Hafod Eryri was
opened in 2009 with great fanfare as befits this granite edifice. During the
time of its re-construction from the previous concrete building that adorned
the summit area for many a year, the high point at the summit of the mountain
also underwent a make-over.
This make-over was substantial with the
old trig pillar being replaced with a rounded version and accompanying brass
panoramic viewfinder.
This viewfinder was especially
installed for when the weather is inclement as visitors can peer out into the
cloud and mist to where distant land in Ireland and the Lake District could be
seen if it were clear and sunny.
It wasn’t just the trig pillar that was
re-fashioned but this whole area too, resulting in two walkways leading up to a
newly built summit plinth that could accommodate the thousands of visitors that
swarm over the summit every year.
Man’s tampering at the summit of
Snowdon set a new challenge to the trio of hill sleuths at G&J Surveys.
John Barnard, one of the surveyors who re-heighted Snowdon said: “We wanted to
measure the height of Snowdon with our Leica GNSS receiver for a number of
years and the opportunity to do so presented itself five months ago.”
The trio of independent surveyors was
approached by Stephen Edwards and Aled Llŷr, head of Cread Cyf and Slam Media
respectively.
Aled Llŷr capturing the scene on Snowdon |
Mr Edwards said: “We are currently
filming a six-programme series named The Mountain for ITV Wales which follows
five people and how the mountain of Snowdon affects their lives.”
These five are a hill-farmer, the head
warden of the Snowdonia national park, a train driver on the Snowdon Mountain
Railway, a member of the Llanberis Mountain Rescue Team and the owner of the
Halfway House cafe.
Aled Llŷr from Slam Media said: “The
programme is due to be broadcast early next year and knowing Stephen’s past
association with G&J Surveys when he joined them on the survey of both
Tryfan and Glyder Fawr, we always knew that a resurvey of Snowdon with their
GNSS equipment would fit nicely into the programme about the mountain.”
The trio of surveyors, Mr Edwards as
producer and Mr Llŷr as director were joined by Mark Greaves, the geodetic
analyst from Ordnance Survey, who was present during the survey to put the
official stamp of approval on proceedings.
Graham Jackson said: “We visited
Snowdon in early June of this year as part of a reconnaissance and this proved
vital as we wanted to acquaint ourselves with the details of the summit area.”
It was through this trip that the hill
sleuths decided that the survey itself would have to take place without
disturbance from the throngs of summit visitors.
The expedition members took the 4.30pm
train on Tuesday 2 September and camped in the café overnight, with prior
permission from the Snowdon Mountain Railway, which leases the building from
the national park authority.
From left: Graham Jackson, Mark Greaves of OS and John Barnard beside the Leica GS15 at the top of Snowdon |
This enabled the survey to take place
when all the train passengers had departed the summit. Once the summit was clear of the multitude, they used a Leica automatic level
and staff to ascertain the high point at the summit plinth and also to
determine the highest ‘natural’ rock that was visible on the periphery of the
plinth.
John Barnard said: “We had studied old
photographs of the summit area from the late 1800s through to the early 2000s and
by doing so we had a comparison of rock formations that appeared in each
photograph. These were compared with photographs we took on the recce and we
now pinpointed where each rock was and took a relative height reading to it
with the level and staff.”
By doing this, the hill sleuths were
able to measure a height difference between the high point of the summit plinth
and the highest ‘natural’ rock.
Myrddyn Phillips said: “Thankfully the
weather was favourable and after pinpointing the position of the highest point
of the summit plinth, we set up the Leica equipment on its 2m pole which was
well supported with a tripod. It was then left in place for three hours to
collect the all-important data.”
The team slept in the cafe and early
next morning they took another three-hour data set from the exact same
position, with the tripod and 2m pole having been left on the summit during the
night.
Walkers heading for Snowdon's summit, and the extra metre's climb. |
The team had the equipment up and
running and gathering data at 5.20am, and then relaxed while watching a
stunning sunrise over Moel Siabod to the East. At 8.20am the second three-hour
data set had been completed and the equipment was then switched off.
Through study of old photographs and
the measurements taken around the periphery of the summit plinth, the hill
sleuths had determined that the top of Snowdon’s summit tor, that is the
natural summit, is buried about 80cm below the summit plinth at the base of the
trig pillar.
The two three-hour data sets from the
survey of Snowdon were combined into one which Mark Greaves later
post-processed using Ordnance Survey software. This gave a height of 1085.67m.
This means that the natural summit is
about 1,084.8m high or 1,085m rounded to the nearest metre to conform to
mapping convention.
So although the natural bedrock and the
Ordnance Survey map height of 1,085m will remain the same, all those thousands
of hillwalkers who struggle up what they think is a mountain of 1,085m in
height are in effect climbing one extra metre and arriving at the top of
Snowdon peering out on land and sea that is 1,086m below them.
ITV Wales is due to broadcast a
half-hour programme about the survey, Snowdon – Climbing New Heights, at 7.30pm
today.
The survey of Snowdon will also form
part of the six-programme series entitled The Mountain which is due for
broadcast early next year on ITV Wales.
John Barnard, Graham Jackson and
Myrddyn Phillips
Please click {here} to see the original
article published on the Grough website
Great show, loved it from start to finish.
ReplyDeleteDid anyone notice the flying anomaly during one of the scenic shots???
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lrP0hxI5ISM