Difference between revisions of "Whitewell Brook"

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The Whitewell Brook flows from Bent Hill, on the moors above Clough Bottom Reservoir. It weaves its way through the Whitewell Valley before meeting the River Irwell in the centre of Waterfoot.
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==Geography Fieldwork==
 
This trip involves standing in a river pretty much all day. You arrive at school in the morning, get shipped off in one of a host of borrowed minibuses to one of the six sites on the Whitewell Brook. Most of the day is spent timing how long it takes for a Bonio dog biscuit to pass two wooden poles. This is school's 'scientific' method of measuring the velocity. There is then the fun task of measuring the depth while trying to avoid the rubbish that litters the floor of the Whitewell Brook (artefacts found to include everything from trolleys to traffic cones to steering wheels). If you're REALLY lucky, it might not rain to make this day even more enjoyable.
 
This trip involves standing in a river pretty much all day. You arrive at school in the morning, get shipped off in one of a host of borrowed minibuses to one of the six sites on the Whitewell Brook. Most of the day is spent timing how long it takes for a Bonio dog biscuit to pass two wooden poles. This is school's 'scientific' method of measuring the velocity. There is then the fun task of measuring the depth while trying to avoid the rubbish that litters the floor of the Whitewell Brook (artefacts found to include everything from trolleys to traffic cones to steering wheels). If you're REALLY lucky, it might not rain to make this day even more enjoyable.

Revision as of 22:10, 10 December 2006

The Whitewell Brook flows from Bent Hill, on the moors above Clough Bottom Reservoir. It weaves its way through the Whitewell Valley before meeting the River Irwell in the centre of Waterfoot.

Geography Fieldwork

This trip involves standing in a river pretty much all day. You arrive at school in the morning, get shipped off in one of a host of borrowed minibuses to one of the six sites on the Whitewell Brook. Most of the day is spent timing how long it takes for a Bonio dog biscuit to pass two wooden poles. This is school's 'scientific' method of measuring the velocity. There is then the fun task of measuring the depth while trying to avoid the rubbish that litters the floor of the Whitewell Brook (artefacts found to include everything from trolleys to traffic cones to steering wheels). If you're REALLY lucky, it might not rain to make this day even more enjoyable.