Review of Trevor D. Ford's book Rocks and Scenery of the Peak District, by Julie Bunting
This review is by Julie Bunting, and was published originally in
The Peak Advertiser, the Peak District's local free newspaper,
on 15th July 2002, and is reproduced with Julie's kind permission.
ROCKS AND SCENERY OF THE PEAK DISTRICT
by Trevor D. Ford
Having often called on the written expertise of Trevor D. Ford when
researching for the Peak Advertiser, I am well aware of the breadth of his
knowledge and the accessibility of his writing. His latest title is the
result of over fifty years' experience in the Peak District. It is presented
in two parts: firstly, the rocks themselves tell of their formation in
changing geographies some 300 million years ago; secondly, the present-day
landscape has been carved into these rocks by a variety of processes,
including the glaciers of the Ice Age.
Thus we have the story of the evolution of the Peak District, broken up into
separate chapters and told in layman's terms. In the early stages it tells
of a time when the region lay beneath warm tropical seas and how volcanic
lava flowed across the lagoon floor. By contrast the Peak District presented
an Arctic tundra during the Great Ice Age, a period which has left its mark
in our caves, quarries and mines. From a section on minerals and mines we
learn that the total number of old lead mines in the Peak probably totals a
staggering 10,000 - an estimate based on the author's knowledge of the
number of named lead veins. This chapter typically contains maps, diagrams
and wonderful colour photographs.
With information about caves, tors and edges, and descriptions of what to
look for in popular walking areas such as Castleton, Kinder, the dales and
valleys, this is just the book to dip into for easily understood
explanations of how our scenery was formed. In fact it is just the right
size to take with you.
Rocks & Scenery of the Peak District by Trevor D. Ford is published by
Landmark Publishing,
price £7.95. Available in stock or to order from local
book shops, ISBN 1 84306 0264.