The Malham Cove reference article from the English Wikipedia on 24-Jul-2004
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Malham Cove

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Malham Cove and [[Malham BeckEnlarge

Malham Cove and [[Malham Beck

]]

Malham Cove is a natural limestone formation, known as a national beauty spot, in North Yorkshire, England. It is comprises a huge, curved limestone cliff at the head of a valley, with a fine area of limestone pavement at the top.

Adam Walker described the cove thus in 1779:

"This beautiful rock is like the age-tinted wall of a prodigious castle; the stone is very white, and from the ledges hang various shrubs and vegetables, which with the tints given it by the bog water. & c. gives it a variety that I never before saw so pleasing in a plain rock."

[[Limestone pavementEnlarge

[[Limestone pavement

at the top of the cove]]

Originally, a large waterfall flowed over the cove as a glacier melted above it. The remnant of a stream which once fell over the cliff flows out of the small lake of Malham Tarn, on the moors above the cove. The stream now disappears under the ground at the aptly-named Water Sinks, several kilometres before its valley reaches the top of the cove. A stream of similar size emerges from a cave at the bottom of the cove, and it was for many years assumed that the two streams were one and the same.

However, experiments with dyes have now shown that this is not the case. Rather two streams go underground at different locations, cross paths without mixing behind the cliff, and re-emerge many miles apart. That this is possible testifies to the complexity of the system of caves behind the cliff, which is thought to be around 50,000 years old.