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Kisdon

Kisdon
Kisdon Hill from Pennine Way 1.jpg
Kisdon seen from the Pennine Way above Keld
Highest point
Elevation 499 m (1,637 ft)
Prominence c. 184 m
Parent peak Great Shunner Fell
Listing Marilyn
Coordinates 54°23′37″N 2°09′31″W / 54.39357°N 2.15859°W / 54.39357; -2.15859Coordinates: 54°23′37″N 2°09′31″W / 54.39357°N 2.15859°W / 54.39357; -2.15859
Geography
Parent range Pennines
OS grid SD898998
Topo map OS Landrangers 92, 98
OS Explorer Outdoor Leisure 30

Kisdon, also called Kisdon Hill is a fell situated in upper Swaledale in the Yorkshire Dales National Park in North Yorkshire, England.

Kisdon was named by early Norse settlers and it has Kisdon Farm on its southern slopes above Straw Beck. The Fell is unusual in that it is an isolated area of high ground with no connecting ridges to other fells. This came about at the end of the last Ice age when the moraine left by the retreating glacier blocked the original course of the River Swale on the west side of the fell and diverted it to its present course, forming a gorge to the east of the fell and leaving Kisdon isolated from other high ground. Kisdon’s isolation gives it the status of a Marilyn even though it only has a modest height of 499 metres (1636 feet).

Another unusual feature of Kisdon is that it has no official footpath to the highest point even though it is crossed by two busy rights of way high up on the fell. One of these is the Pennine Way on its way between the hamlets of Thwaite and Keld which reaches a height of 420 metres on the eastern shoulder of the fell, while the bridleway between Keld and Muker also known as the Old Corpse Road because it was formerly used as a corpse road to transport bodies for burial in consecrated ground lower down the valley crosses the fell on the western side at a height of 470 metres. Kisdon lies within a band of Yoredale limestone, it is on Kisdon that the band attains its maximum thickness of 40 metres.

The fell is crossed by many high wire topped dry stone walls which can make attaining the highest point of the fell awkward and this should be borne in mind when planning an ascent. Routes to the summit can be started at Muker, Thwaite or Keld and the bridleway should be used to attain the summit plateau where it joins a high wall which can be followed northerly to the summit of the fell which is marked by a substantial cairn, although the highest point does seem a few metres east of it. 100 metres east of the summit is a five metre deep shake hole which is marked on the Ordnance Survey map as a pot hole, so the depression may go much deeper on closer investigation.


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Wikipedia

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