fbpx
Wikipedia

River Lymn

The River Lymn is a river in Lincolnshire, England. It rises in the Wolds on the eastern slope of Castcliffe Hill in Fulletby parish. It flows south-eastwards to the Lincolnshire Marsh, where it becomes known as the Steeping River on the boundary of Great Steeping parish. The main channel is supplemented by the Wainfleet Relief Channel as it passes Wainfleet All Saints, and the relief channel is joined by the old course of the Lymn. Once the two channels rejoin, there are three flood defence structures to protect the region from flooding by the North Sea.

River Lymn
The weir at Mill Farm, Partney
Location
CountryEngland
CountiesLincolnshire
Physical characteristics
Source 
 • locationBelchford
 • elevation300 ft (91 m)
MouthSteeping River
 • location
Gibraltar Point
River Lymn
Source on Belchford Hill
Source on Castcliffe Hill
Salmonby lake
West Road, Tetford (right)
Tetford Mill
Double Dike
Stockwith Mill
Stockwith Mill Bridge
A158 Aswardby Bridge
A16 Partney Bridge
B1195 Halton Bridge
Lady Wath's Beck
Boston - Skegness railway
Steeping River + railway
The Lymn
Clough Bridge, Firsby Clough
Warth's Bridge
Bell Water Drain, Thorpe Culvert PS
Thorpe Culvert Bridge
Wainfleet Relief Channel
Bycroft's Bridge
Cowcroft Drain
Crow's Bridge
B1195 Salem Bridge (left)
Croft Lane Pumping Station
Crown Farm Pumping Station
A52 bridges, Wainfleet All Saints
Boston - Skegness railway
Steeping River or Wainfleet Haven
Haven House Sluice
Burgh Sluice Relief Channel
Wainfleet Clough outfall
Burgh Sluice
Cow Bank Drain Pumping Station
Gibraltar Point Nature Reserve
Gibraltar Point Pumping Station
North Sea

Route edit

The river rises on the southern slope of Belchford Hill, to the east of Belchford and close to the 300-foot (91 m) contour. It flows to the south and then to the east to reach Tetford,[1] where there is a grade II listed water mill and mill house. It was built in the late eighteenth century, but shows evidence that it was built around an earlier structure. The much-repaired water wheel, dating from the seventeenth century, and the corn milling machinery are still intact.[2] Beyond Tetford the river is joined by Double Dike, and flows south through woodland, passing to the west of Somersby and Bag Enderby. Here it is joined by a second stream, which rises on the eastern slope of Castcliffe Hill in Fulletby, close to the 280-foot (85 m) contour. It flows through a large lake and is joined by a stream from Holbeck Manor before passing through Salmonby. By the time the two streams join, they are below the 130-foot (40 m) contour.[1]

It continues to the south-east and has dropped by another 33 feet (10 m) by the time it reaches the millpond of Stockwith Mill, beyond which is Stockwith Mill Bridge. The A158 road crosses at Aswardby Bridge, and the site of Aswardby Mill is below that. The next crossing is at Sausthorpe Bridge, which carries a minor road towards Sausthorpe, and the river drops below the 65-foot (20 m) contour at this point. The course continues to the east, passing under the A16 road between Spilsby and Partney at Partney Bridge, by Mill Farm, where there is a weir with a footbridge over the top. Beyond Spilsby, it turns to the south, crossing under a minor road at Northorpe Bridge and the B1195 road at Halton Bridge, to the east of Halton Holegate. Mill Bridge carries another minor road over the channel, but by the time the river reaches it, the river is in the Fens, the channel is embanked on both sides, and it crosses the 16-foot (5 m) contour.

Steeping River edit

The River Lymn is joined by another embanked channel, Lady Wath's Beck, as it passes between Great Steeping to the north and Little Steeping to the south, and takes the name Steeping River.[1] The railway line between Boston and Skegness crosses to the north bank, and then follows the course of the river to below Wainfleet All Saints. The next bridge is Clough's Bridge, carrying a minor road over the main channel. Just before it, the old course of the Lymn leaves the straight channel of the Steeping River.[1] It is no longer connected to the Steeping River, but is maintained as a drainage ditch by the Internal Drainage Board (IDB).[3] Warth's Bridge and Thorpe Culvert Bridge follow, both roads leading to Thorpe Culvert railway station. Thorpe Culvert pumping station, owned by the IDB, is located just before the second bridge, and after it, the Wainfleet Relief Channel turns off, passing under the railway almost immediately. There are two more bridges as the main channel crosses Wainfleet Common, Bycroft's Bridge and Crow's Bridge.[1] Crow's Bridge has an elliptical arch constructed of red bricks, and was designed by the engineer John Rennie in 1812.[4] Salem Bridge carries the B1195 road to Wainfleet railway station, and the A52 road crosses to the east of Wainfleet All Saints. The channel is now also called Wainfleet Haven, and both names are used to describe it until it reaches the sea.[1]

The Wainfleet Relief Channel is also crossed by the B1195 road, and shortly afterwards, the Lymn joins it. Cowcroft Drain, which joins the Lymn from the north,[1] and the Lymn below the junction are both designated as main rivers, and are the responsibility of the Environment Agency, as is Croft Lane pumping station, which pumps the water from the Lymn into the relief channel.[5] Croft Lane bridge is next, after which the A52 and the Boston to Skegness railway cross, and the relief channel rejoins Wainfleet Haven. The final section contains three flood defence structures. Haven House Sluice is first, after which the channel splits. Wainfleet Clough Outfall is on the western channel, which is tidal below the sluice. The Burgh Sluice Relief Channel is to the east, and Burgh Sluice protects it from the sea just before the two channels rejoin.[1] Cow Bank Drain was excavated in 1812, as part of the last land reclamation scheme in the area.[6] Cow Bank pumping station, owned by the IDB, pumps the drain into the outfall.[7]

Below the outfall, Gibraltar Point National Nature Reserve is located to the east among the dunes and saltings. It is a Site of Special Scientific Interest (SSSI) and a Ramsar site, which provides a diverse habitat for birds such as grey plover and knot, plants including brackish water crowfoot and insects including the red-banded sand-wasp, among others.[8] Gibraltar Point Sailing Club is located at Gibraltar Point, and the east bank of the river channel is used for mooring yachts.[9] Now called Wainfleet Harbour, the channel crosses sand and mudflats to reach Wainfleet Swatch, an area of water protected from the North Sea by the Inner Knock sandbank at low water. The area to the south of Wainfleet Harbour is called Wainfleet Sand and is a danger area.[1] It has been used for artillery practice since at least 1890, but may have been used for cannon and musketry practice long before that. More recently, it was part of RAF Wainfleet, and was used for weaponry practice by aircraft, until the closure of the range in December 2009.[10]

Hydrology edit

There is a layer of sandstone rock beneath the whole of the catchment of the River Lymn, which is largely covered by a layer of chalk. The sandstone outcrops in only a few places, and where it does, springs provide the base flow for the river.[11] As the layers of rock continue to dip to the east, they are covered by boulder clay, gravel and alluvium.[12]

Flow on the upper river is measured by a gauging station at Partney Mill, consisting of a Crump weir with a 16-foot (5 m) crest.[13] The catchment area of the river above this point is 23.8 square miles (61.6 km2),[14] and this area received annual rainfall of 27.4 inches (696 mm) in the 1960s. This produces an average daily flow of 9.5 million gallons (43.2 Megalitres (Ml)), although a peak flow of 253M gallons (1149 Ml) was recorded in April 1981.[15]

Discharge to the North Sea is along the Burgh Sluice Relief Channel during the winter and at times of high flow, but when flows in the river are low, Wainfleet Clough Sluice is used as the discharge point.[16]

The Environment Agency measure water quality of the river systems in England. Each is given an overall ecological status, which may be one of five levels: high, good, moderate, poor and bad. There are several components that are used to determine this, including biological status, which looks at the quantity and varieties of invertebrates, angiosperms and fish. Chemical status, which compares the concentrations of various chemicals against known safe concentrations, is rated good or fail.[17]

The water quality of the Lymn and Steeping was as follows in 2019.

Section Ecological Status Chemical Status Length Catchment Channel
Lymn / Steeping[18] Moderate Fail 28 miles (45 km) 65.75 square miles (170.3 km2) heavily modified

Like many rivers in the UK, the chemical status changed from good to fail in 2019, due to the presence of polybrominated diphenyl ethers (PBDE) and mercury compounds, neither of which had previously been included in the assessment.

History edit

 
Haven House Sluice on the lower Wainfleet Haven or Steeping River

The manipulation of the river channel has a long history, dating back to at least the thirteenth century, when the river was diverted to the south at Firsby Clough and then to the east at White Cross Clough, creating two channels. Because the old channel ran through the manor of Croft, and was used to supply drinking water for cattle, an agreement for its management was reached in 1240. The flow was diverted along the old channel for the first three weeks after Easter, and then along the new channel for three weeks. This six-week cycle was repeated until Michaelmas (29 September). The arrangement was ratified by the Court of Sewers in 1432 and 1501, and continued in operation until at least 1774.[19][20] The original channel is the Lymn, while the southern channel has been straightened and enlarged to become the Steeping River.

Thorpe Culvert takes its name from a culvert which was built under the river to drain water into the Bell Water Drain. The area to the north of the culvert became part of the Witham Fourth District in 1818, and the culvert was built soon afterwards. Responsibility for the drain passed to the Witham and Steeping Catchment Board following the passing of the Land Drainage Act in 1930, and they commissioned a new pumping station to pump water from the drain into the Steeping in 1938.[21] It contained two Ruston & Hornsby diesel engines, driving 36-inch (91 cm) Gwynnes centrifugal pumps, and could pump 322M gallons (1,460 Ml) per day when both were running.[22]

Responsibility for the drain and pumping station then passed to the Anglian Water Authority, and they built a new electric pumping station, which was commissioned in 1983. The diesel station was retained, but its condition deteriorated, so that by the early 1990s, only one of the engines was operational. At the request of Lindsey Marsh IDB, a small team of volunteers began to restore the station and the engines in 1994, and the site is opened for visitors three times a year. The restoration has enabled the station to be used twice in 2000 and once in 2004, when power failure prevented the electric station from operating, and during the floods of 2007, both engines ran to assist the electric pumps. The team of volunteers was led by Dennis Quincey, and following his death in 2002, the Drainage Board renamed it Quinceys Pumping Station.[23]

In the medieval period, Wainfleet was an important port, and had a thriving salt industry, extracting salt from sea water. The town was much closer to the sea at that time, but the gradual silting of the channel and the enclosure of land on both sides of it saw the demise of the port, with its function taken over by Boston. The channel, known as Wainfleet Haven, was still used by shipping, although larger ships unloaded cargo into river barges close to Gibraltar Point, from where the barges travelled up the river to Wainfleet. Commercial use of the Haven by boats ceased in the 1920s.[24]

Points of interest edit

Bibliography edit

  • CAMS (January 2007). "The Steeping, Great Eau and Long Eau Catchment Abstraction Management Strategy (Part 2)" (PDF). Environment Agency. Archived from the original (PDF) on 28 March 2014.
  • Hawley, David; Russell, Ian; Ray, John (May 2009). "Steeping River Catchment" (PDF). Lincolnshire County Council / Environment Agency. (PDF) from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 7 October 2011.
  • Manning, Chris; Quigley, Anita; et al. (June 2008). "The Lincolnshire Coastal Grazing Marshes Project - Water Level Management Study" (PDF). Lindsey Marsh Drainage Board. (PDF) from the original on 15 June 2019.
  • Marsh, Terry; Hannaford, Jamie (2008). (PDF). Natural Environment Research Council. ISBN 978-0-9557672-2-7. Archived from the original (PDF) on 31 October 2014.
  • Owen, A E B (1965). A Thirteenth-century Agreement on Water for Livestock in the Lindsey Marsh (PDF). British Agricultural History Society. (PDF) from the original on 4 March 2016. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  • Robinson, David (2005). (PDF). Lincolnshire Life. Archived from the original (PDF) on 30 March 2012. Retrieved 8 October 2011.

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i Ordnance Survey, 1:25,000 map
  2. ^ Historic England. "Tetford Mill (1063659)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 6 October 2011.
  3. ^ Hawley, Russell & Ray 2009, p. 6
  4. ^ Historic England. "Crow's Bridge over Steeping River (1224273)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 7 October 2011.
  5. ^ Hawley, Russell & Ray 2009, p. 4,8
  6. ^ Robinson 2005, p. 1.
  7. ^ Hawley, Russell & Ray 2009, p. 8.
  8. ^ CAMS 2007, p. 37
  9. ^ "Welcome". Gibraltar Point Yacht Club. from the original on 4 February 2019. Retrieved 30 July 2018.
  10. ^ . Engineering Science Aviation Group. Archived from the original on 15 July 2011.
  11. ^ CAMS 2007, pp. 35–36
  12. ^ CAMS 2007, p. 34
  13. ^ Marsh & Hannaford 2008, p. 87
  14. ^ Marsh & Hannaford 2008, p. 85
  15. ^ Marsh & Hannaford 2008, p. 83
  16. ^ CAMS 2007, p. 35
  17. ^ "Glossary (see Biological quality element; Chemical status; and Ecological status)". Catchment Data Explorer. Environment Agency. 17 February 2016.
  18. ^ "Lymn / Steeping". Catchment Data Explorer. Environment Agency.
  19. ^ Manning & Quigley 2008, p. 8
  20. ^ Owen 1965, pp. 40–44.
  21. ^ "History". Witham Fourth District IDB. from the original on 26 October 2017. Retrieved 7 October 2011.
  22. ^ "Thorpe Culvert Quinceys Pumping Station". Lincolnshire County Council. from the original on 7 January 2017.
  23. ^ (PDF). Lindsey Marsh Drainage Board. Archived from the original (PDF) on 17 July 2012.
  24. ^ "Wainfleet Conservation Area Appraisal" (PDF). East Lindsey District Council. August 2007. p. 8. (PDF) from the original on 30 July 2018. Retrieved 8 October 2011.

External links edit

  Media related to Steeping River at Wikimedia Commons   Media related to River Lymn at Wikimedia Commons

river, lymn, confused, with, river, river, lincolnshire, england, rises, wolds, eastern, slope, castcliffe, hill, fulletby, parish, flows, south, eastwards, lincolnshire, marsh, where, becomes, known, steeping, river, boundary, great, steeping, parish, main, c. Not to be confused with River Lym The River Lymn is a river in Lincolnshire England It rises in the Wolds on the eastern slope of Castcliffe Hill in Fulletby parish It flows south eastwards to the Lincolnshire Marsh where it becomes known as the Steeping River on the boundary of Great Steeping parish The main channel is supplemented by the Wainfleet Relief Channel as it passes Wainfleet All Saints and the relief channel is joined by the old course of the Lymn Once the two channels rejoin there are three flood defence structures to protect the region from flooding by the North Sea River LymnThe weir at Mill Farm PartneyLocationCountryEnglandCountiesLincolnshirePhysical characteristicsSource locationBelchford elevation300 ft 91 m MouthSteeping River locationGibraltar Point vteRiver Lymn Legend Source on Belchford Hill Source on Castcliffe Hill Salmonby lake West Road Tetford right Tetford Mill Double Dike Stockwith Mill Stockwith Mill Bridge A158 Aswardby Bridge A16 Partney Bridge B1195 Halton Bridge Lady Wath s Beck Boston Skegness railway Steeping River railway The Lymn Clough Bridge Firsby Clough Warth s Bridge Bell Water Drain Thorpe Culvert PS Thorpe Culvert Bridge Wainfleet Relief Channel Bycroft s Bridge Cowcroft Drain Crow s Bridge B1195 Salem Bridge left Croft Lane Pumping Station Crown Farm Pumping Station A52 bridges Wainfleet All Saints Boston Skegness railway Steeping River or Wainfleet Haven Haven House Sluice Burgh Sluice Relief Channel Wainfleet Clough outfall Burgh Sluice Cow Bank Drain Pumping Station Gibraltar Point Nature Reserve Gibraltar Point Pumping Station North Sea Contents 1 Route 1 1 Steeping River 2 Hydrology 3 History 4 Points of interest 5 Bibliography 5 1 References 6 External linksRoute editThe river rises on the southern slope of Belchford Hill to the east of Belchford and close to the 300 foot 91 m contour It flows to the south and then to the east to reach Tetford 1 where there is a grade II listed water mill and mill house It was built in the late eighteenth century but shows evidence that it was built around an earlier structure The much repaired water wheel dating from the seventeenth century and the corn milling machinery are still intact 2 Beyond Tetford the river is joined by Double Dike and flows south through woodland passing to the west of Somersby and Bag Enderby Here it is joined by a second stream which rises on the eastern slope of Castcliffe Hill in Fulletby close to the 280 foot 85 m contour It flows through a large lake and is joined by a stream from Holbeck Manor before passing through Salmonby By the time the two streams join they are below the 130 foot 40 m contour 1 It continues to the south east and has dropped by another 33 feet 10 m by the time it reaches the millpond of Stockwith Mill beyond which is Stockwith Mill Bridge The A158 road crosses at Aswardby Bridge and the site of Aswardby Mill is below that The next crossing is at Sausthorpe Bridge which carries a minor road towards Sausthorpe and the river drops below the 65 foot 20 m contour at this point The course continues to the east passing under the A16 road between Spilsby and Partney at Partney Bridge by Mill Farm where there is a weir with a footbridge over the top Beyond Spilsby it turns to the south crossing under a minor road at Northorpe Bridge and the B1195 road at Halton Bridge to the east of Halton Holegate Mill Bridge carries another minor road over the channel but by the time the river reaches it the river is in the Fens the channel is embanked on both sides and it crosses the 16 foot 5 m contour Steeping River edit The River Lymn is joined by another embanked channel Lady Wath s Beck as it passes between Great Steeping to the north and Little Steeping to the south and takes the name Steeping River 1 The railway line between Boston and Skegness crosses to the north bank and then follows the course of the river to below Wainfleet All Saints The next bridge is Clough s Bridge carrying a minor road over the main channel Just before it the old course of the Lymn leaves the straight channel of the Steeping River 1 It is no longer connected to the Steeping River but is maintained as a drainage ditch by the Internal Drainage Board IDB 3 Warth s Bridge and Thorpe Culvert Bridge follow both roads leading to Thorpe Culvert railway station Thorpe Culvert pumping station owned by the IDB is located just before the second bridge and after it the Wainfleet Relief Channel turns off passing under the railway almost immediately There are two more bridges as the main channel crosses Wainfleet Common Bycroft s Bridge and Crow s Bridge 1 Crow s Bridge has an elliptical arch constructed of red bricks and was designed by the engineer John Rennie in 1812 4 Salem Bridge carries the B1195 road to Wainfleet railway station and the A52 road crosses to the east of Wainfleet All Saints The channel is now also called Wainfleet Haven and both names are used to describe it until it reaches the sea 1 The Wainfleet Relief Channel is also crossed by the B1195 road and shortly afterwards the Lymn joins it Cowcroft Drain which joins the Lymn from the north 1 and the Lymn below the junction are both designated as main rivers and are the responsibility of the Environment Agency as is Croft Lane pumping station which pumps the water from the Lymn into the relief channel 5 Croft Lane bridge is next after which the A52 and the Boston to Skegness railway cross and the relief channel rejoins Wainfleet Haven The final section contains three flood defence structures Haven House Sluice is first after which the channel splits Wainfleet Clough Outfall is on the western channel which is tidal below the sluice The Burgh Sluice Relief Channel is to the east and Burgh Sluice protects it from the sea just before the two channels rejoin 1 Cow Bank Drain was excavated in 1812 as part of the last land reclamation scheme in the area 6 Cow Bank pumping station owned by the IDB pumps the drain into the outfall 7 Below the outfall Gibraltar Point National Nature Reserve is located to the east among the dunes and saltings It is a Site of Special Scientific Interest SSSI and a Ramsar site which provides a diverse habitat for birds such as grey plover and knot plants including brackish water crowfoot and insects including the red banded sand wasp among others 8 Gibraltar Point Sailing Club is located at Gibraltar Point and the east bank of the river channel is used for mooring yachts 9 Now called Wainfleet Harbour the channel crosses sand and mudflats to reach Wainfleet Swatch an area of water protected from the North Sea by the Inner Knock sandbank at low water The area to the south of Wainfleet Harbour is called Wainfleet Sand and is a danger area 1 It has been used for artillery practice since at least 1890 but may have been used for cannon and musketry practice long before that More recently it was part of RAF Wainfleet and was used for weaponry practice by aircraft until the closure of the range in December 2009 10 Hydrology editThere is a layer of sandstone rock beneath the whole of the catchment of the River Lymn which is largely covered by a layer of chalk The sandstone outcrops in only a few places and where it does springs provide the base flow for the river 11 As the layers of rock continue to dip to the east they are covered by boulder clay gravel and alluvium 12 Flow on the upper river is measured by a gauging station at Partney Mill consisting of a Crump weir with a 16 foot 5 m crest 13 The catchment area of the river above this point is 23 8 square miles 61 6 km2 14 and this area received annual rainfall of 27 4 inches 696 mm in the 1960s This produces an average daily flow of 9 5 million gallons 43 2 Megalitres Ml although a peak flow of 253M gallons 1149 Ml was recorded in April 1981 15 Discharge to the North Sea is along the Burgh Sluice Relief Channel during the winter and at times of high flow but when flows in the river are low Wainfleet Clough Sluice is used as the discharge point 16 The Environment Agency measure water quality of the river systems in England Each is given an overall ecological status which may be one of five levels high good moderate poor and bad There are several components that are used to determine this including biological status which looks at the quantity and varieties of invertebrates angiosperms and fish Chemical status which compares the concentrations of various chemicals against known safe concentrations is rated good or fail 17 The water quality of the Lymn and Steeping was as follows in 2019 Section Ecological Status Chemical Status Length Catchment Channel Lymn Steeping 18 Moderate Fail 28 miles 45 km 65 75 square miles 170 3 km2 heavily modified Like many rivers in the UK the chemical status changed from good to fail in 2019 due to the presence of polybrominated diphenyl ethers PBDE and mercury compounds neither of which had previously been included in the assessment History edit nbsp Haven House Sluice on the lower Wainfleet Haven or Steeping River The manipulation of the river channel has a long history dating back to at least the thirteenth century when the river was diverted to the south at Firsby Clough and then to the east at White Cross Clough creating two channels Because the old channel ran through the manor of Croft and was used to supply drinking water for cattle an agreement for its management was reached in 1240 The flow was diverted along the old channel for the first three weeks after Easter and then along the new channel for three weeks This six week cycle was repeated until Michaelmas 29 September The arrangement was ratified by the Court of Sewers in 1432 and 1501 and continued in operation until at least 1774 19 20 The original channel is the Lymn while the southern channel has been straightened and enlarged to become the Steeping River Thorpe Culvert takes its name from a culvert which was built under the river to drain water into the Bell Water Drain The area to the north of the culvert became part of the Witham Fourth District in 1818 and the culvert was built soon afterwards Responsibility for the drain passed to the Witham and Steeping Catchment Board following the passing of the Land Drainage Act in 1930 and they commissioned a new pumping station to pump water from the drain into the Steeping in 1938 21 It contained two Ruston amp Hornsby diesel engines driving 36 inch 91 cm Gwynnes centrifugal pumps and could pump 322M gallons 1 460 Ml per day when both were running 22 Responsibility for the drain and pumping station then passed to the Anglian Water Authority and they built a new electric pumping station which was commissioned in 1983 The diesel station was retained but its condition deteriorated so that by the early 1990s only one of the engines was operational At the request of Lindsey Marsh IDB a small team of volunteers began to restore the station and the engines in 1994 and the site is opened for visitors three times a year The restoration has enabled the station to be used twice in 2000 and once in 2004 when power failure prevented the electric station from operating and during the floods of 2007 both engines ran to assist the electric pumps The team of volunteers was led by Dennis Quincey and following his death in 2002 the Drainage Board renamed it Quinceys Pumping Station 23 In the medieval period Wainfleet was an important port and had a thriving salt industry extracting salt from sea water The town was much closer to the sea at that time but the gradual silting of the channel and the enclosure of land on both sides of it saw the demise of the port with its function taken over by Boston The channel known as Wainfleet Haven was still used by shipping although larger ships unloaded cargo into river barges close to Gibraltar Point from where the barges travelled up the river to Wainfleet Commercial use of the Haven by boats ceased in the 1920s 24 Points of interest editPoint Coordinates Links to map resources OS Grid Ref Notes Belchford Hill 53 15 48 N 0 01 46 W 53 2634 N 0 0294 W 53 2634 0 0294 Belchford Hill TF315758 source Castcliffe Hill 53 14 29 N 0 02 20 W 53 2414 N 0 0389 W 53 2414 0 0389 Castcliffe Hill TF309733 source Stockwith Mill 53 12 49 N 0 01 53 E 53 2136 N 0 0314 E 53 2136 0 0314 Stockwith Mill TF357704 A16 Partney Bridge 53 11 11 N 0 05 50 E 53 1863 N 0 0971 E 53 1863 0 0971 A16 Partney Bridge TF402675 Junction with Lady Wath s Beck 53 09 02 N 0 08 33 E 53 1505 N 0 1426 E 53 1505 0 1426 Junction with Lady Wath s Beck TF433636 Start of The Lymn 53 07 52 N 0 11 07 E 53 1310 N 0 1853 E 53 1310 0 1853 Start of The Lymn TF463615 old course Start of Wainfleet Relief Channel 53 07 11 N 0 11 54 E 53 1197 N 0 1983 E 53 1197 0 1983 Start of Wainfleet Relief Channel TF472603 Jn of Lymn and Cowcroft Drain 53 07 56 N 0 13 36 E 53 1321 N 0 2267 E 53 1321 0 2267 Jn of Lymn and Cowcroft Drain TF490617 Jn of Lymn and Wainfleet Relief Channel 53 06 58 N 0 14 28 E 53 1161 N 0 2410 E 53 1161 0 2410 Jn of Lymn and Wainfleet Relief Channel TF500600 Croft Lane pumping station End of Wainfleet Relief Channel 53 06 40 N 0 16 07 E 53 1112 N 0 2687 E 53 1112 0 2687 End of Wainfleet Relief Channel TF519595 Wainfleet Clough outfall 53 06 41 N 0 18 13 E 53 1114 N 0 3035 E 53 1114 0 3035 Wainfleet Clough outfall TF542596 Burgh Sluice 53 06 08 N 0 18 59 E 53 1022 N 0 3163 E 53 1022 0 3163 Burgh Sluice TF551586 Wainfleet Harbour 53 05 31 N 0 19 09 E 53 0919 N 0 3191 E 53 0919 0 3191 Wainfleet Harbour TF553574 mouth Map all coordinates using OpenStreetMap Download coordinates as KML GPX all coordinates GPX primary coordinates GPX secondary coordinates Bibliography editCAMS January 2007 The Steeping Great Eau and Long Eau Catchment Abstraction Management Strategy Part 2 PDF Environment Agency Archived from the original PDF on 28 March 2014 Hawley David Russell Ian Ray John May 2009 Steeping River Catchment PDF Lincolnshire County Council Environment Agency Archived PDF from the original on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 7 October 2011 Manning Chris Quigley Anita et al June 2008 The Lincolnshire Coastal Grazing Marshes Project Water Level Management Study PDF Lindsey Marsh Drainage Board Archived PDF from the original on 15 June 2019 Marsh Terry Hannaford Jamie 2008 UK Hydrometric Register PDF Natural Environment Research Council ISBN 978 0 9557672 2 7 Archived from the original PDF on 31 October 2014 Owen A E B 1965 A Thirteenth century Agreement on Water for Livestock in the Lindsey Marsh PDF British Agricultural History Society Archived PDF from the original on 4 March 2016 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help Robinson David 2005 Poachings Croft Marsh PDF Lincolnshire Life Archived from the original PDF on 30 March 2012 Retrieved 8 October 2011 References edit a b c d e f g h i Ordnance Survey 1 25 000 map Historic England Tetford Mill 1063659 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 6 October 2011 Hawley Russell amp Ray 2009 p 6 Historic England Crow s Bridge over Steeping River 1224273 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 7 October 2011 Hawley Russell amp Ray 2009 p 4 8 Robinson 2005 p 1 Hawley Russell amp Ray 2009 p 8 CAMS 2007 p 37 Welcome Gibraltar Point Yacht Club Archived from the original on 4 February 2019 Retrieved 30 July 2018 RAF Wainfleet a brief history Engineering Science Aviation Group Archived from the original on 15 July 2011 CAMS 2007 pp 35 36 CAMS 2007 p 34 Marsh amp Hannaford 2008 p 87 Marsh amp Hannaford 2008 p 85 Marsh amp Hannaford 2008 p 83 CAMS 2007 p 35 Glossary see Biological quality element Chemical status and Ecological status Catchment Data Explorer Environment Agency 17 February 2016 Lymn Steeping Catchment Data Explorer Environment Agency Manning amp Quigley 2008 p 8 Owen 1965 pp 40 44 History Witham Fourth District IDB Archived from the original on 26 October 2017 Retrieved 7 October 2011 Thorpe Culvert Quinceys Pumping Station Lincolnshire County Council Archived from the original on 7 January 2017 Thorpe Culvert Preservation PDF Lindsey Marsh Drainage Board Archived from the original PDF on 17 July 2012 Wainfleet Conservation Area Appraisal PDF East Lindsey District Council August 2007 p 8 Archived PDF from the original on 30 July 2018 Retrieved 8 October 2011 External links edit nbsp Media related to Steeping River at Wikimedia Commons nbsp Media related to River Lymn at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title River Lymn amp oldid 1192019765 Steeping River, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.