The Peak District forms the southern extremity of the Pennines. Much of it is upland above , its highest point being
Kinder Scout at . Despite its name, the landscape has fewer sharp peaks than rounded hills,
plateaus, valleys, limestone
gorges and gritstone
escarpments (the "edges"). The mostly rural area is surrounded by conurbations and large urban areas, including
Manchester,
Huddersfield,
Sheffield,
Derby and
Stoke-on-Trent. The formal boundaries of the
national park cover most of the
Dark Peak and
White Peak, but the wider, informal region known as the Peak District is less well defined. The Dark Peak is largely uninhabited
moorland and gritstone escarpments in the northern Peak District and its eastern and western margins. It encloses the central and southern White Peak, which is where most settlements, farmland and limestone gorges are found. Three of
Natural England's
National Character Areas (NCAs) cover parts of it. The Dark Peak NCA includes the northern and eastern parts of the Dark Peak and the White Peak NCA most of the White Peak. The western margins of the Dark Peak are in the South West Peak NCA, sometimes considered a third area, where farmland and pastured valleys are found with gritstone edges and moorland. Outside the park, the wider Peak District extends from the gritstone moorlands of the
South Pennines to the north, separated approximately by the
Tame Valley,
Standedge and
Holme Valley. It continues south and roughly ends at the
Weaver Hills near the
Churnet Valley. It often includes the area approximately between
Disley and Sterndale Moor, encompassing
Buxton and the
Peak Dale corridor. It may also include some of the outer fringes and foothills, such as the Churnet and
lower Derwent Valleys, and the area approximately between
The Cloud and
Mow Cop. Conversely, while the rural west of the
City of Sheffield falls in the park boundaries, the urban area of the city is usually excluded, alongside the other surrounding large urban areas. The rest of the region is surrounded by lowlands, including the
Cheshire Plain and
Greater Manchester Built-up Area to the west. The
Derbyshire and Yorkshire Coalfields lie to the east while the lowlands of the
Midlands are to the south, near the north of the
Trent Valley. The national park covers , including most of the region in Derbyshire and extends into Staffordshire, Cheshire, Greater Manchester and South and West Yorkshire. Its northern limit is on a track near Deer Hill in
Meltham; its southernmost point is on the
A52 road near
Ashbourne. The boundaries were drawn to exclude built-up and industrial areas; in particular Buxton and the quarries at the end of the Peak Dale corridor are surrounded on three sides by the park.
Bakewell and many villages are in the national park, as is much of the rural west of Sheffield. In 2010 it became the fifth largest national park in England and Wales. In the UK, designation as a national park means that planning and other functions are provided by a national park authority, with additional restrictions that enhance protection from inappropriate development. Land within this national park as in others is in a mix of public and private ownership. The
National Trust, a charity that conserves historic and natural landscapes, owns about 12 per cent of the land in the national park. Its three estates (
High Peak,
White Peak and
Longshaw) include ecologically or geologically significant areas at
Bleaklow,
Derwent Edge,
Hope Woodlands,
Kinder Scout, the
Manifold valley,
Mam Tor,
Dovedale,
Milldale and
Winnats Pass. The park authority owns around 5 per cent; other major landowners include several water companies. panorama between
Hayfield and
Chinley Settlements Bakewell is the largest settlement and only town in the national park and the site of the National Park Authority offices. Its
five-arched bridge over the River Wye dates from the 13th century. Castleton is the centre of production of a semi-precious mineral,
Blue John.
Eyam village is known for a self-imposed quarantine during the
Black Death.
Edale is the southern end of the
Pennine Way, a 268-mile
national trail which traverses most of the Pennines and ends at
Kirk Yetholm in the
Scottish border. The park also contains the highest village in the United Kingdom,
Flash, at . Other villages in the park include
Hathersage,
Hartington,
Ilam and
Tideswell. The towns of
Glossop,
Chapel-en-le-Frith,
Buxton,
Macclesfield,
Leek, Ashbourne,
Matlock and
Chesterfield are on the national park's fringes. The
spa town of Buxton was built up by the
Dukes of Devonshire as a genteel health resort in the 18th century while the
spa at
Matlock Bath, in the River Derwent valley, was popularised in Victorian times.
Hayfield is at the foot of Kinder Scout, the area's highest summit. Other towns and villages fringing the park include
Whaley Bridge,
Hadfield,
Tintwistle,
Darley Dale and
Wirksworth in Derbyshire,
Stocksbridge in South Yorkshire and
Marsden and
Holmfirth in West Yorkshire.
Rivers, reservoirs and canals Several rivers have sources on the moorland plateaux of the Dark Peak and the high ridges of the White Peak. Many rivers in the Dark Peak and outer fringes were dammed to create reservoirs for supplying drinking water. Streams were dammed to provide headwater for
water driven mills;
weirs were built for the same purpose. The reservoirs of the
Longdendale Chain were completed in February 1877 to provide compensation water, ensuring a continuous flow in the
River Etherow, which was essential for local industry and provided drinking water for Manchester. The reservoirs of the Upper Derwent Valley were built from the early to mid-20th century to supply drinking water to the
East Midlands and South Yorkshire. The
rivers Noe and the
Wye are tributaries. The
River Manifold and
River Dove in the south-west, whose sources are on
Axe Edge Moor, flow into the Trent. The
River Dane flows into the
River Weaver in Cheshire. There are no canals in the national park, although the
Standedge Tunnels on the
Huddersfield Narrow Canal run underneath the extreme north of it. Outside the park, waters from the Dark Peak feed the
Macclesfield,
Ashton, and Huddersfield Narrow Canals and waters from the White Peak fed the
Cromford Canal. The
Peak Forest Canal brought
lime from the quarries at
Dove Holes for the construction industry. It terminated at
Bugsworth Basin and the journey was completed using the
Peak Forest Tramway. The Cromford Canal, from
Cromford to the
Erewash Canal, served lead mines at
Wirksworth and
Sir Richard Arkwright's cotton mills. The
Caldon Canal from
Froghall was built to transport limestone from quarries at Cauldon Low for the iron industry and flints for the pottery industry.
Climate Most of the area is over above sea level, in the centre of the country at a latitude of 53°N, bringing relatively high annual rainfall averaging in 1999. The Dark Peak tends to receive more rainfall than the White Peak, as it is higher. The higher rainfall does not affect the temperature, which averages the same as the rest of England and Wales at . In the 1970s, the Dark Peak regularly had more than 70 days of snowfall. Since then the number has fallen. The hills still see long periods of continuous snow cover in some winters. Snow in mid-December 2009 on some hill summits created some snow patches that lasted until May 2010. In the same winter, the A635 (Saddleworth Moor) and A57 (Snake Pass) were closed due to snow for almost a month. Frost cover is seen for 20–30 per cent of the winter on moorland in the Dark Peak and 10 per cent in the White Peak. The Moorland Indicators of Climate Change Initiative was set up in 2008 to collect data in the area. Students investigated the interaction between people and the moorlands and their effect on climate change, to discover whether the moorlands are a net
carbon sink or source, based on the fact that Britain's upland areas contain a major global carbon store in the form of
peat. Human interaction in terms of direct erosion and fire, with the effects of global warming, are the main variables they considered. ==Geology==