Angle Tarn (Patterdale)
Angle Tarn is a lake in Cumbria, England, within the Lake District National Park, about a mile north-east of Hartsop. Located at an altitude of 479 m (1,572 ft), the lake has an area of 5.9 hectares (15 acres), measures 385 by 260 m (1,263 by 853 ft), with a maximum depth of 9 m (30 ft).[1] The lake is very distinctive in that it resembles a fish hook in shape. It contains ‘two rocky islets and a small broken peninsula’.[2]
This should not be confused with Angle Tarn (Langstrath), a smaller lake with the same name about 18.5 km to the north-east near Bowfell, also within the Lake District National Park.
References
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Angle Tarn (Patterdale). |
- "Angle Tarn (Patterdale)". f22.org.uk. Retrieved 25 July 2012.
- Otley, Jonathan (1830). A concise description of the English lakes, and adjacent mountains: with general directions to tourists: notices of the botany, mineralogy, and geology of the district; observations on meteorology; the floating island in Derwent lake; and black-lead mine in Borrowdale. The author. p. 32. Retrieved 25 July 2012.
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