The Long Kin East Cave - Rift Pot system is a limestone cave system on the southern flanks of
Ingleborough
Ingleborough () is the second-highest mountain in the Yorkshire Dales, England. It is one of the Yorkshire Three Peaks (the other two being Whernside and Pen-y-ghent), and is frequently climbed as part of the Three Peaks walk. A large pa ...
,
North Yorkshire
North Yorkshire is the largest ceremonial county (lieutenancy area) in England, covering an area of . Around 40% of the county is covered by national parks, including most of the Yorkshire Dales and the North York Moors. It is one of four cou ...
in
England
England is a country that is part of the United Kingdom. It shares land borders with Wales to its west and Scotland to its north. The Irish Sea lies northwest and the Celtic Sea to the southwest. It is separated from continental Europe ...
lying within the designated Ingleborough
Site of Special Scientific Interest. Long Kin East Cave starts as a long meandering stream passage but then plummets down a deep shaft when it meets a shattered
fault into which Rift Pot also descends. At the bottom, the stream flows through some low canals and sumps, to eventually emerge at Austwick Beck Head in
Crummackdale.
Description
The main entrance to Long Kin East Cave () is where a small stream sinks into a deepening fissure in a small exposure of limestone rocks located in an extensive area of moorland. The fissure gains a roof and morphs into a walking-sized meandering stream passage, passing an alternative dry entrance at the first corner. After the passage passes below a walled-off pothole () where daylight enters. After a further an ascent up a slope of rocks leads to the bottom of the Long Kin East Pot entrance - a deep shaft ().
A route through the boulders at the bottom of the Long Kin East entrance drops into the continuation of the stream passage. This continues for a further where it starts to descend a succession of small cascades and pitches. A final cascade leads into a chamber overlooking a deep shaft, at the bottom of which is an elongated rift chamber formed within a fault.
Upstream ascends a boulder slope where various routes from Rift Pot enter. Downstream, a mud slope drops into a stream passage, which continues upstream as a series of oxbows that reappear in the chamber. The stream continues low and wide to a junction. Downstream continues to a long sump that emerges in a long canal at the end of which is a second sump. This has been explored for .
Upstream from the junction, a wet crawl reaches some
gour pools in a walking-sized passage, before continuing as a crawl which chokes just to the east of Jockey Hole.
A few metres back from the chamber overlooking the main pitch, a bedding traverse in the roof of the passage leads to a high chamber overlooking the shaft. A boulder slope can be followed round the chamber to a rock bridge crossing the rift. A short descent from ''The Bridge'' leads into Rift Pot (see below).
The Rift Pot entrance () is located on the same major fault as is seen underground. The deep shaft of Jockey Hole lies further up on the same fault. The entrance shaft drops into a large chamber. The chamber is blind to the north, but an ascent of boulders on the south side climbs up into one end of the enormous fault chamber, at the far end of which enters Long Kin East Cave. Two small pitches over boulders lead to a boulder platform below ''The Bridge'', from the top of which a traverse leads back into Long Kin East Cave. From the platform, a variety of routes may be descended to the floor of the chamber, below, between the various jammed boulder platforms that partition the chamber. One route which does not descend through the boulders is the ''68 Series'', which start as a bedding plane passage leading off from a boulder chamber above the floor. This complex of passages is about long, one branch of which descends a succession of small pitches to finish at a window overlooking the bottom of the chamber some above the floor.
Both Rift Pot and Long Kin East Cave have been equipped with
resin P-hangers allowing cavers to follow a number of different routes to the bottom using
single rope technique
Single-rope technique (SRT) is a set of methods used to descend and ascend on the same single rope. Single-rope technique is used in caving, potholing, rock climbing, canyoning, roped access for building maintenance and by arborists for tree ...
s.
Geology and hydrology
The Long Kin East system is a
solutional cave
A solutional cave, solution cave, or karst cave is a cave usually formed in the soluble rock limestone. It is the most frequently occurring type of cave. It can also form in other rocks, including chalk, dolomite, marble, salt beds, and gypsum. ...
formed in
Visean Great Scar
limestone
Limestone ( calcium carbonate ) is a type of carbonate sedimentary rock which is the main source of the material lime. It is composed mostly of the minerals calcite and aragonite, which are different crystal forms of . Limestone forms wh ...
from the
Mississippian
Mississippian may refer to:
* Mississippian (geology), a subperiod of the Carboniferous period in the geologic timescale, roughly 360 to 325 million years ago
*Mississippian culture, a culture of Native American mound-builders from 900 to 1500 AD ...
Series of the
Carboniferous period.
The entrance to Long Kin East Cave is close to the limestone margin where a small stream, with a mean flow of about , sinks into the limestone.
The entrance passage is a meandering
vadose canyon which descends gradually following the local southerly
dip before reaching the main shaft. This, and Rift Pot, are formed in the
breccia
Breccia () is a rock composed of large angular broken fragments of minerals or rocks cemented together by a fine-grained matrix.
The word has its origins in the Italian language, in which it means "rubble". A breccia may have a variety of d ...
and
shear zone
In geology, a shear zone is a thin zone within the Earth's crust or upper mantle that has been strongly deformed, due to the walls of rock on either side of the zone slipping past each other. In the upper crust, where rock is brittle, the shea ...
of a major fault.
Exploration of the
phreatic
''Phreatic'' is a term used in hydrology to refer to aquifers, in speleology to refer to cave passages, and in volcanology to refer to a type of volcanic eruption.
Hydrology
The term phreatic (the word originates from the Greek , meaning "well" ...
stream passage at the bottom of the shaft has reached a point which is above and about distant from the resurgence at Austwick Beck Head in Crummackdale.
History
There is a mention of Long Kin in an article published in ''
The Gentleman's Magazine
''The Gentleman's Magazine'' was a monthly magazine founded in London, England, by Edward Cave in January 1731. It ran uninterrupted for almost 200 years, until 1922. It was the first to use the term '' magazine'' (from the French ''magazine'' ...
'', by ''Pastor'', know to be a pseudonym for John Hutton, in March 1761, but despite associating it with the near-by Jockey Hole the description matches neither Rift Pot nor Long East Cave: "''There is, likewise, partly south-east, a small rivulet which falls into a place considerable deep, called Long-Kin;''". It is clear that the first part of Long Kin East Cave had been explored as far as the skylight entrances by 1889, as a paper published in the Leeds Geological Association Transactions says: "''these being three fissures connected by a subterranean passage, through which a small stream flows''". A detailed description of the cave was given by Balderstone in ''Ingleton: Bygone and Present'', published in 1890, but it seems that he did not reach as far as the two skylight entries. He also describes two surface shafts he called "''Long Kin Holes''". It is clear from the description that one of them was what is now known as Jockey Hole, but the other was the then unnamed Rift Pot, which he plumbed to a depth of . The hydrological connection between Long Kin East Cave and Austwick Beck Head was established in 1900 using
fluorescein
Fluorescein is an organic compound and dye based on the xanthene tricyclic structural motif, formally belonging to triarylmethine dyes family. It is available as a dark orange/red powder slightly soluble in water and alcohol. It is widely use ...
by the
Yorkshire Geological Society.
Rift Pot was first descended in 1904 by members of the
Yorkshire Ramblers Club. The full descent was made over three separate days, with the party being hampered by a large quantity of loose rock. They named the pothole, Rift Pot, "''because of its characteristic form, it being literally a huge vertical rift in the limestone''".
In 1904 a party the Yorkshire Speleological Association (YSA) including
Eli Simpson Eli "Cymmie" Simpson ( – ) was an influential and controversial British caver and speleologist, and a founding member and Recorder of the British Speleological Association.
Life and career
Simpson began caving in 1901, and in 1905 helped cre ...
, dug through the boulders at the bottom of what is now known as Long Kin East Pot, to reach the continuation of the Long Kin East Cave streamway. Two more explorations took place in 1904 and 1905, but it is unclear how far was reached. In 1906 the followed the stream through to the head of the shaft which drops in the final chamber of Rift Pot. They also discovered the traverse over the head of the big pitch leading to the top of ''The Bridge'' in Rift Pot from where they could discern daylight filtering through from ahead. The connection between the two caves was made in 1908 when a group who had descended Long Kin East Cave hung a ladder from the bridge and joined a party who had descended Rift Pot. The first descent of the big pitch in Long Kin East was made in 1925 by members of the Gritstone Club, when they also produced a survey of the relationship between the two caves. The first mention of the upstream passages was in October 1969 when University of Leeds Speleological Association reported that they had surveyed them in 1967. The ''68 Series'' were explored in 1968 by members of the same club.
The terminal sump was first dived by Dave Yeandle in 1975, but little progress was made in the low visibility.
Rick Stanton had three dives in 1987, to reach the current limit without reaching a positive conclusion.
[{{Cite journal , last=Stanton , first=Rick , date=October 1987 , title=Rift Pot , journal=Cave Diving Group Newsletter , volume=85 , pages=7–8]
References
External links
Online surveys of the Long Kin East Cave - Rift Pot systemRigging guide for Long Kin CaveRigging guide for Rift Pot
Caves of North Yorkshire
Limestone caves