Glaze Brook Explained

Glaze Brook
Subdivision Type1:Country
Subdivision Name1:England
Subdivision Type3:Region
Subdivision Name3:North West England
Subdivision Type4:District
Subdivision Name4:Wigan, Greater Manchester, Warrington, Cheshire
Length:35km (22miles)
Source1 Location:Confluence of Pennington / Moss brooks
Mouth Location:River Mersey

Glaze Brook is a minor river in the River Mersey catchment area, England. From Leigh, Greater Manchester to the River Mersey it forms the county boundary with Cheshire. It is long and its main tributaries are the Astley, Bedford, Hey, Pennington, Shaw and Westleigh Brooks.[1]

Pennington Brook starts at the outflow of Pennington Flash 53.4849°N -2.5354°W close to Aspull Common. Pennington Flash is fed by Hey Brook, a continuation of Borsdane Brook, which runs southwards from Blackrod.

Glaze Brook originates at the confluence of Pennington Brook and Moss Brook, north of Hawkhurst Bridge.[2] After picking up the waters of Bedford Brook, which runs southward from Leigh and the Black or Moss Brook coming west from Worsley via Chat Moss, the brook turns southward, ultimately draining into the River Mersey section of the Manchester Ship Canal near Cadishead.

The catchment drains the flat lowland around Leigh which reaches a maximum altitude of 158 mAOD. The brook flows through largely agricultural land. Its tributaries extend into former mining and industrial areas in which mining subsidence has created flashes (lakes) at Pennington and Westleigh. The underlying geology is the sandstone and coal measures of the Lancashire Coalfield.

Tributaries

Notes and References

  1. http://environment.data.gov.uk/catchment-planning/OperationalCatchment/nw-22/Summary
  2. Web site: Local Environment Agency Plan : SANKEY/GLAZE CONSULTATION REPORT. PDF. May 1996. Environmentdata.org. 4 July 2022.