Arten Gill Viaduct, Settle-Carlisle Railway. Dentdale, Yorkshire Dales National Park, Cumbria, England, United Kingdom, Europe.

Arten Gill Viaduct, Settle-Carlisle Railway. Dentdale, Yorkshire Dales National Park, Cumbria, England, United Kingdom, Europe. Stock Photo
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Image details

Contributor:

Stan Pritchard / Alamy Stock Photo

Image ID:

BT85D8

File size:

34.5 MB (2.5 MB Compressed download)

Releases:

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Dimensions:

4256 x 2831 px | 36 x 24 cm | 14.2 x 9.4 inches | 300dpi

Date taken:

20 October 2010

Location:

Arten Gill Viaduct, Dentdale, Yorkshire Dales National Park, Cumbria, England, United Kingdom.

More information:

Arten Gill Viaduct is one of two major masonry structures built relatively close to each other as part of the southern section of the Settle & Carlisle Railway, the only mainline mountain railway in the country. The other is the Dent Head Viaduct. Both lie between Blea Moor Tunnel and Dent Station. Arten Gill viaduct was constructed in 'Dent marble' , a dark limestone with high fossil content. It has eleven almost semi-circular segmented arches, which span 13.7m each and have a radius of 7m. At its highest point, it carries the rails at 35.7m above water level. John Sydney Crossley designed it as part his work on the whole railway. He was chief engineer to the Midland Railway, the builders of the line.The viaduct's piers are tapered, with prominent springings for the arches. Two sets of widened piers, which are designed to prevent progressive collapse should one of the arches fail, divide the viaduct into sections of two, three and six spans. The foundations of several of the piers are sunk 16.8m below the river bed onto bed rock. The parapets are of solid masonry and the viaduct is 201m long. The date “1875” can be seen on the arch to the north of Arten Gill.The viaduct is most impressive on the skyline, particularly when approached from below along a rough farm track up the side of the hill from Stone Houses, half way between Dent Head and Cowgill.