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| The Calf at Ilkley Moor |
Following on from my day out to Leeds, where I learned a lot about the history of the canal and railway and its various industries, my attention next turned to a recce for the August 2024 field trip with the Sheffield U3A Geology Group to Ilkley Moor.
On a few occasions the group had made good use of geological trails and walks produced by the West Yorkshire Geology Trust and the Leeds Geological Association, with Bill Fraser leading trips to Roundhay Park and east Leeds and Gareth Martin showing us around Wharncliffe Crags.
The group leader, who I had undertaken several recces with, had been suffering from poor health and this time I was very glad that John and Trish had volunteered to provide transport and help with the preparation of this field trip. They are seasoned walkers who are equipped with satellite navigation devices and Ordnance Survey maps and, although we had carefully researched the walk using a variety of other online maps, we discovered that the southern part of the route is far from easy to follow.
Setting off from Treeton and driving up the M1, our route via the M62, the A677 ring road around Bradford and with views of the countryside beyond Bingley was much more enjoyable than the sat nav route that was taken by the group leader on both the recce and field trip to Otley Chevin, which involved a convoluted tour of the eastern part of Leeds.
Arriving at the car park off Hangingstone Road, we could clearly see the crags of Addingham Edge Grit that form the Cow and Calf Rocks and which the group had seen at Otley Chevin and I had encountered as a building stone in the former Leeds School Board a few days before.
Following the path, which is laid with flagstones that contain ripple marks and were salvaged from one of the old textile mills in the area, our first stop was at a large boulder next to the path, which has an eroded tube shaped void in it.
This is a fossil imprint of the Upper Carboniferous Knorria, the inner pithy layers of the Lepidodendron club moss from which the outer layers of bark have been shed. Looking closely at the very coarse grained sandstone, this would have been formed in a large river channel and the fossil would have been derived from the swampy forest along its river banks.
Next on the route was the large slumped block known as the Calf, which is 11 m high and was detached from the main outcrop by the ice sheet that covered Lower Wharfedale 10-12,000 years ago, with it subsequently sliding downslope and rotating at an angle of 140 degrees.
Making our way into the large Cow and Calf Quarry, in several places the deeply iron stained quarry faces are covered in graffiti, which has been carved into the very coarse grained and frequently pebbly Addingham Edge Grit.
On the day of the field trip a couple of years later, a local resident who joined the group for this event explained that some of these, including the “OLD CRACK AND RACKETY JACK”, are the names of climbing routes that were roughly carved into the gritstone by some of the rock climbers who frequented this very popular locality.
Leaving the quarry and making our way along another path to the heather and bracken covered moorland above it, we obtained a good view down into the quarry and of the glaciated valley of Lower Wharfedale further in the distance.
To the south, the ground rises to form Ilkley Crags but we headed north to the escarpment of the Cow and Calf Rocks overlooking Ilkley, where the gritstone is covered in graffiti that largely dates to the C19. Most of these have been carved by visitors who frequented Ilkley when it was a fashionable spa town, with many of them showing a high degree of letter cutting skills.
Taking in the views of Wharfedale, we then continued to the Hangingstone Quarry and went to look for the cup and ring marks, which are one of over 400 that are found in the area – mainly scattered around Rombalds Moor to the west – and date back to the Neolithic or Bronze Age.
Very near to these marks, which have been cut into a surface that has been scoured by ice, is a large rock that shows very distorted bedding that is known as soft sediment deformation. These are created by the escape of water, caused by rapid squeezing of the sediment and the expulsion of water during slumping or tectonic activity.
Dropping back down into the floor of the quarry, we then went in search for the next location on the geological trail, a set of slickensides, which we eventually found in the south-west corner of the quarry at high level.
The brown polished face marks the place where the rocks on each side of a north-south aligned fault plane have ground against one another to leave a series of closely spaced lineations. The rocks are dated as c.310 million years old and the movement along the fault must have taken place at a later time, but there is no way of assigning a date to this.
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| A detail of the slickensides |






















































