- Little Hart Crag
Infobox Mountain
Name = Little Hart Crag
Photo = Little_Hart_Crag_from_High_Hartsop_Dodd.jpg
Caption = Little Hart Crag from High Hartsop Dodd with the crags of Black Brow on the right.
Location =Cumbria , ENG
Range =Lake District ,Eastern Fells
Elevation = 637 m (2,090 ft)
Grid_ref_UK = NY387100
Topographic
OS "Landranger" 90 OS "Explorer" 5, 7
Prominence = 34 m
Parent peak =Dove Crag
Listing = Hewitt, Nuttall, WainwrightLittle Hart Crag is a
fell in theLake District area ofEngland . It stands at the head of Scandale, six kilometres north ofAmbleside , at a height of 637 metres (2090 feet). It is an eastern outlier ofDove Crag in theEastern Fells , although it does have 34 metres of prominence from that fell making it both a Hewitt and a Nuttall fell. It is frequently climbed as part of the Dovedale horseshoe, an 11 kilometre walk over the neighbouring fells ofHartsop above How ,Hart Crag , Dove Crag andHigh Hartsop Dodd , starting and finishing atBrothers Water .Topography
Little Hart Crag is composed of grassy slopes on its eastern slopes above the Scandale pass, with the tiny Scandale Tarn tucked in a hollow in the hill. To the east it drops steeply into Caiston Glen. On its west side it is connected to Dove Crag by the boggy hollow of Bakestone Moss and to the north east a ridge falls away towards
Patterdale going over High Hartsop Dodd before dropping steeply to the valley. The fell is craggy on its northern side as the crags of Black Brow fall into Dovedale.Geology
The summit is an outcrop of Middle Dodd
Dacite , the underlying rock beingvolcaniclastic sandstone .British Geological Survey : 1:50,000 series maps, "England & Wales Sheet 38": BGS (1998)]ummit and View
The summit is of interest, there being two distinct tops about 100 metres apart, both of whom are rocky. The western top is the higher and is marked by a
cairn , while the eastern one is more shapely but a few metres lower and hasquartzite set into its rocks. The view from the top of the fell is restricted by higher fells, but it does give the opportunity of studying the crags of Dove Crag andRed Screes in detail.Ascents
Little Hart Crag is nearly always climbed in conjunction with other adjacent fells, there being no feasible direct ascent although it can be climbed from Patterdale via the top of the Scandale Pass. The most direct route from Patterdale starts at Brothers Water and firstly ascends High Hartsop Dodd before continuing to the summit of Little Hart Crag. Also from Patterdale the fell can also be climbed in conjunction with Red Screes or Dove Crag and even Fairfield.
References
* A Pictorial Guide to the Lakeland Fells, Eastern Fells, Alfred Wainwright, ISBN 0-7112-2454-4
* Complete Lakeland Fells, Bill Birkett, ISBN 0-00-713629-3
* The Mountains of England and Wales, John and Anne Nuttall ISBN 1-85284-037-4
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