Out & About …

… on the North York Moors, or wherever I happen to be.

Slacks Beck

I know a confluence is where two streams or rivers converge. The usual node in a river network. A meeting of waters. But what is a parting of waters called? Where a stream separates into two courses. I know of one, in the Lake District, Raise Beck above where it tumbles down to Dunmail Raise. One course flows north into Thirlmere, the other south into Grasmere. Of course, in times of low flow, one course is less dominant and dries up. It’s called a “bifurcation”, from the Latin furca for a fork.

Slacks Beck in Great Ayton normally disappears underground in the old whinstone quarry of Slacks Wood, only to bubble out of the ground 50 or so metres away. But this morning, the beck full with overnight rain, there was a bifurcation with half the water flowing into the flooded quarry. OK, not as good an example as Raise Beck but I was struggling to find inspiration.




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2 responses to “Slacks Beck”

  1. Dick Lewsley avatar
    Dick Lewsley

    As ever, an interesting and informative post. Your example of Raise Beck as a bifurcation may not be the best as this was diverted artificially to feed Thirlmere, when it was dammed to make the reserevoir for Manchester. Last time I was there, the stream bed down to Grasmere was completely dry and grassed-over (suggesting little or no flow at any time). There’s a natural bifurcation on Scale Beck in Buttermere.

  2. Fhithich avatar
    Fhithich

    Scale Beck you say. I’ll put that on my to-do list. Thanks, Dick.

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