Grough recently published an article on the survey of Calf
Top and its elevation in height to 2,000ft and its reclassification to Hewitt
status. The original article and a link
to it on the Grough website appear below.
Britain gains a new mountain as new model pushes Calf Top over the mark
– by 6mm
Myrddyn Philips, Guest contributor
Tuesday 06 September 2016 10:36 AM GMT
Tuesday 06 September 2016 10:36 AM GMT
A trio of hill sleuths were
disappointed when, after extensive measurements of a Yorkshire Dales peak found
it just failed to measure up to the 2,000ft mark – a generally accepted height
for a mountain.
Calf Top, part of Middleton
Fell in the western Dales, was just ¾ of an inch shy of the magic mark when
Myrddyn Phillips, John Barnard and Graham Jackson surveyed it using accurate
professional-level GPS equipment in 2010.
Britain's newest mountain Calf Top, in the Yorkshire Dales |
Fast -forward six years, and
Ordnance Survey, Britain’s official mapping agency, announced it had updated
its model for determining heights of the country’s hills. Some were higher; some
lower.
After some detective work,
one of the trio, Myrddyn Phillips, realised the implications for Calf Top. And
a new British mountain was born. The peak beats the 2,000ft mark by 6mm – about
the thickness of a compass baseplate. So if you’re planning to visit the new
mountain, tread softly; all that hard surveying work could be undone by a pair
of heavy boots.
Myrddyn Phillips here
recounts the story of the three men who went up a hill and, six years later,
realised they had come down a mountain.
Calf Top, at grid reference
SD 664 856, is situated in the north-western part of the Yorkshire Dales and
rises above the valleys of Barbondale to its South-East and Dentdale and the
River Dee to its North-East.
The hill – as it was – is
rather eloquent in shape with steep eastern slopes descending to the minor road
beside the Barkin Beck, whilst its south-westerly slopes descend toward the
village of Barbon.
Myrddyn Phillips gets the horizontal view during the survey of Calf Top |
Calf Top is separated from
its higher neighbourly peaks of Great Coum and Gragareth by the deep cleft of
Barbondale, meaning that although it is not as high, it is still prominent
above its surroundings.
However, it is the height of
the hill and not necessarily its prominence that is of interest as its
accurately surveyed height has recently increased, not by much in the grand
scheme of things, but nevertheless by sufficient to reclassify it to the
dizzying heights of just over 609.6m, which for the imperial-minded takes the
hill to the benchmark height of being a 2,000ft mountain.
This hill, or shall we now
call it, mountain, has a convoluted history of being accurately surveyed as
those intrepid hill sleuths; Barnard, Jackson and Phillips spent six hours atop
the then hill in 2010. They visited twice, the first time in April when they
gathered two hours of summit data, and the result proved so close to the
all-important 609.6m/2,000ft benchmark height that they re-visited the
following month and gathered a second data set, this time their prolonged stay
on the summit came to four hours.
Each data set were sent to
Ordnance Survey who processed the data via Bernese software, with the result
being a tantalizingly 609.58m, just 2cm, or for those imperial enthusiasts a
mere ¾ of an inch under 2,000ft. Resigned that such a result cannot be argued
with and satisfied that they had done as much as they could; the three intrepid
surveyors packed their gear away and headed toward their next surveying
project.
However, all surveyed heights
in Britain are dependent upon Ordnance Survey base stations, whose height and
position are known extremely accurately, they are also dependent upon the geoid
model that Ordnance Survey use to ascertain these heights, and this geoid model
has just been updated, this is known as OSGM15.
Using OSGM15 takes in the latest transformations
that incorporate new gravity data and iron-out any discrepancies. OSGM15 has
meant that the majority of heights that have been produced by precision GPS
equipment will alter, not by a great amount, but in certain cases like Calf
Top, by an amount that makes all the difference.
John Barnard, left, and Graham Jackson with the Leica GS15 gathering data at the summit of Calf Top |
The following analysis was produced by Alan Dawson,
who is a list author and surveyor of repute: areas most affected are in the
main in Scotland with Lewis (up by 20-30cm), Barra (down by 20-30cm),
Trotternish and Applecross (down by 10-20cm). East Mull and part of Argyll
(down by 5-15cm), and the Scilly Isles (down by up to 35cm).
The affect that OSGM15 has had on accurately
surveyed heights in both England and Wales is not as great as in certain parts
of Scotland, with the majority of heights that have been produced by precision
GPS equipment going up by 2-4cm.
This 2-4cm total is all important as it increases
the known height for Calf Top.
The new height for Calf Top produced by Ordnance
Survey using OSGM15 is 609.606m. This is 6mm over the threshold height of
609.6m/2,000ft. Small margins can sometimes make all the difference.
The new height of 609.606m is so new that
acceptance by some of the respective hill-list authors whose listings this new
height affects, still awaits. For those enthusiastic peak baggers these
listings are:
- Calf Top is currently listed as a ‘Dewey’
(hills in England, Wales and the Isle of Man at or above 500m and below
609.6m in height – Michael Dewey, published by Constable in 1995).
- One of the listings that Calf Top can be
promoted to is; ‘Nuttalls’ (mountains in England and Wales at or above
609.6m/2,000ft in height with 15m minimum drop. The Mountains of England
and Wales volume 2 England – John and Anne Nuttall, first edition
published by Cicerone Press in 1990).
- Calf Top can also be promoted to the ‘Hewitts’
(mountains in England at or above 609.6m/2,000ft in height with 30m
minimum drop. The Hewitts and Marilyns of England – Alan Dawson, published
by TACit Tables in 1997. The word Hewitt is an acronym for ‘Hill in
England, Wales or Ireland over Two Thousand feet high’).
As the height produced by Ordnance Survey in 2010 from data sent them by the three intrepid hill sleuths came to 609.58m, maps were then updated from the 609m spot height of the day to a rounded figure of 610m.
Thankfully this rounded figure will now remain as
although the conversion necessitated by OSGM15 increases the known height of
Calf Top, its map value had already been updated, and for those confused souls
who walked up what they thought to be a 610m high mountain but only reached a
609.58m high hill, they can reclaim their senses in the knowledge that their
efforts weren’t in vain.
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