Parkhouse Hill

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Parkhouse Hill
Derbyshire
Parkhouse hill.jpg
Range: Peak District
Summit: 1,180 feet SK079669
53°11’57"N, 1°52’60"W

Parkhouse Hill is a small but distinctive hill in the Peak District in Derbyshire. It stands on the north side of the River Dove, close to the border with Staffordshire: the river, here nought but a young stream, runs along the southern slope of the hill, marking the county border.

Geologically, the hill is the remains of an atoll (a 'reef knoll') which is believed to have existed during the Carboniferous period when what is now the Peak District was covered by a tropical sea. Together with its higher but less distinctive neighbour, Chrome Hill, it forms the Chrome and Parkhouse Hills Site of Special Scientific Interest, cited for their geology and limestone flora.[1]

For many years access to Parkhouse Hill was difficult, as there was no right of way to the summit. Access is now possible as it is open access land.

In 1997, the writer Jeff Kent discovered that a double sunset could be seen against Parkhouse Hill from nearby Glutton Grange and, two years later, the phenomenon was first captured on film by the photographer Chris Doherty. The occurrence is visible in good weather in late March, early April and September, when the sun sets just to the south of the summit of the hill, begins to re-emerge almost immediately afterwards from its steep northern slope before fully reappearing and later sets for a second and final time at the foot of the hill. The precise event and its location are described in Kent's book The Mysterious Double Sunset.[2]

Outside links

References

  1. SSSI listing and designation for Chrome and Parkhouse Hills
  2. The Mysterious Double Sunset, especially pages 103-104, 106, 201 and 202 and photographs 18 (i)-(iv), Jeff Kent, ISBN 0-9529152-5-1, Witan Books, 2001.