Carreg Cadno

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Carreg Cadno
Brecknockshire

On Carreg Cadno
Range: Fforest Fawr
Summit: 1,763 feet SN874161
51°49’48"N, 3°38’1"W

Carreg Cadno (meaning 'rock of the fox') is a hill five miles northeast of Abercraf in Brecknockshire, in the Fforest Fawr range of hills and within the Brecon Beacons National Park. It reaches a height of 1,763 feet above sea level at its summit.

Ogof Ffynnon Ddu, Britain's deepest natural cave, lies under the northern slopes of Carreg Cadno. The vertical interval between the sink of the Byfre Fechan stream at Pwll Byfre and its resurgence at Ffynnon Ddu is 1,000 feet.[1]

The hill is within the 'Ogof Ffynnon Ddu National Nature Reserve', which is owned and managed by the Countryside Council for Wales.[2]

Geology

The southern slopes of the hill are formed from the Twrch Sandstone, a coarse quartzitic sandstone (gritstone), formerly known as the 'Basal Grit' of the Millstone Grit Series, and laid down during the Namurian stage of the Carboniferous period. The northern slopes are formed from the underlying Carboniferous Limestone. The area displays various features typical of karstic landscapes including hundreds of shakeholes in both the limestone and the gritstone areas. Substantial areas of gritstone country have foundered as the underlying limestone has dissolved away and caverns have collapsed. There are also areas of both limestone pavement and gritstone pavement. The latter occasionally retain striations on their polished upper surfaces due to scratching by stones embedded in the base of a moving icesheet during the last Ice Age some 18,000 years ago.

There are also pockets of silica sand where the gritstone has been intensively weathered. An economically valuable deposit of silica sand was worked near Pwll Byfre for many years and transported by tramroad to make refractory bricks ('firebricks' or 'silica bricks') at the nearby Penwyllt Dinas Silica Brick Works.

The Ogof Ffynnon Ddu nature reserve has been established to protect both the surface features and the vegetation and habitats which they provide and also the extensive cave network beneath.

Access

The hill is designated as open country and so freely available to walkers. A public footpath followed by the Beacons Way crosses the northern flanks of the hill in an east-west arc from Ystradfellte to Penwyllt. Many walkers start in a car park beside the limestone quarry at Penwyllt (SN855156).

Outside links

References

  1. British Geological Survey 1:50,000 map sheet 231 'Merthyr Tydfil' & accompanying memoir
  2. @