Landscapes
in the Peak District come in two forms, the Dark Peak and the
White Peak. The brooding high moorland tops of the Dark Peak
in the north take their name from the underlying gritstone. Known
as millstone grit from its former use, the millstone is now used
to mark out the peak park boundary.
The High
Peak ( as it is known) was described by Daniel Defoe as "perhaps
the most desolate wild and abandoned country in all England",
its windswept, mist-shrouded and inhospitable moorland often
encompasses large areas of bogland. It is a firm favourite with
walkers on the Pennine Way which meanders north from the tiny
village of Edale, the beginning of Kinder Scout.
|