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Great Borne

Great Borne
Great Borne from Ennerdale.jpg
Great Borne seen from near the western end of Ennerdale Water.
Highest point
Elevation 616 m (2,021 ft)
Prominence 113 m (371 ft)
Parent peak High Stile
Listing Hewitt, Nuttall, Wainwright
Coordinates 54°32′04″N 3°21′25″W / 54.53435°N 3.35685°W / 54.53435; -3.35685Coordinates: 54°32′04″N 3°21′25″W / 54.53435°N 3.35685°W / 54.53435; -3.35685
Geography
Great Borne is located in Lake District
Great Borne
Great Borne
Location in Lake District, UK
Location Cumbria, England
Parent range Lake District, Western Fells
OS grid NY124163
Topo map OS Landranger 89, OS Explorer 4

Great Borne is a fell in the English Lake District with a height of 616 m (2,021 ft). It is a rather secluded hill situated at the western end of the long ridge which divides the Ennerdale and Buttermere valleys.

The name Great Borne only really applies to the fells summit area with most West Cumbrians actually referring to the fell as Herdus. However Bill Birkett in his Complete Lakeland Fells gives Great Borne and Herdus the status of separate fells, with Herdus’ summit standing half a kilometre west of Great Borne with an altitude 562 m (1,844 ft). The meaning of Great Borne translates from the French language meaning "Great Boundary" as in the 13th century the fell denoted the edge of the Loweswater forest, an alternative meaning has been put forward as "Great Stream" from the southern Old English language with bourne meaning a stream flowing from a spring.

Great Borne's southern slopes are of some interest, they fall away precipitously towards Ennerdale Water with steep crags and scree which are composed of pink granophyre rock which give these slopes a reddish tinge(see picture).Approximately halfway between Great Borne and the part of the fell labelled Herdus on the 1:50,000 O.S. map is the boundary between the Skiddaw Group and the Ennerdale Granophyre intrusion. The outlying low summit of Bowness Knott (333 m (1,093 ft)) also lies to the south, it is composed of Skiddaw Slate, it gives good views of Ennerdale Water and is an easy climb from the car park which lies at its foot. Historians have also found evidence of an old (possibly Middle Ages) field system on the lower southern slopes of Great Borne below the crags and scree. The northern flanks of the fell descend to the Floutern Pass, a pedestrian route between Ennerdale and Buttermere. To the east Great Borne is connected to the neighbouring fell of Starling Dodd by a ridge, while the western slopes descend quickly to the low ground of the west Cumbrian plain.


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Wikipedia

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