Sun glistening in rocky waters of the upland stream channel of the Marshaw Wyre, near Tower Lodge, Trough of Bowland, Lancashire


The Marshaw Wyre, a headwater stream of the River Wyre that enters the sea at Fleetwood, is incised into glacial deposits supporting shallow-rooted beech trees and conifers downstream of the exposed moortops where the stream starts. The stream, in dry weather, is reduced to a trickle. It responds rapidly to heavy rain, however. The steep slopes, thin soils and impermeable bedrock of the upland valley give rise to the rapid overland flow of rainwater. A view near Tower Lodge, a small house at the side of the Lancaster- Dunsop Bridge road (behind the camera) and originally built as a gate lodge to a shooting lodge on the moors above in the early 19th Century. With easy access from the road, the river is well-visited by both tourists and geography students.


Size: 5255px × 3435px
Location: Marshaw Wyre, at Tower Lodge, Forest of Bowland, Lancashire, United Kingdom
Photo credit: © robert harrison / Alamy / Afripics
License: Royalty Free
Model Released: No

Keywords: -angular, angular, boulders, bowland, channel, forest, geography, kingdom, lancashire, marshaw, reflections, river, rocks, rural, scene, stones, stream, sun, trough, uk, united, upland, view, water, wyre