Leck Beck Explained

Leck Beck
Subdivision Type1:Country
Subdivision Name1:United Kingdom
Subdivision Type2:Part
Subdivision Name2:England
Subdivision Type3:County
Subdivision Name3:Lancashire, Cumbria
Source1:Crag Hill
Mouth:Confluence with River Lune

Leck Beck is a watercourse in Lancashire with its source on Crag Hill in Cumbria between Leck Fell and Casterton Fell.

For several kilometres near the start of its course, the water flows into the Ease Gill Cave System, part of The Three Counties System, the longest cave system in Britain (and 26th longest in the world) via 14 major sink holes, to resurge at a major spring at Leck Beck Head.[1] [2]

The rising of Leck Beck Head was dived extensively in the 1980s and required underwater digging and the use of an air chisel to make progress.[3] The overflow for this rising, Witches Cave (Yorkshire), has been dived through a 300m sump into Witches II. A dry entrance was dug into Witches II from the surface in 2010.

The Beck flows through Leck, Cowan Bridge and Overtown before joining the River Lune near Nether Burrow.

References

54.1667°N -38°W

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Leck Beck Head Catchment Area. English Nature.
  2. Web site: Gulden. Bob. World's Longest Caves. 14 July 2015.
  3. Leck Beck Head opened up. 1993. Descent. 110. 8.