Glacial Landscapes: Economic Activities and Conflicts
Economic Uses of Glaciated Upland Landscapes
UK glaciated uplands — particularly the Lake District, Snowdonia, and the Scottish Highlands — support several important economic activities. Their distinctive landscapes are both a resource and a constraint.
Farming:
- Glacial troughs have flat, alluvial valley floors (deposited from glacial outwash): these areas are cultivated for hay and silage or support intensive dairy farming
- Steep valley sides and upland plateaux (poor acidic soils, high rainfall, short growing season) are used for hill sheep farming (Herdwick and Swaledale breeds in the Lake District; Welsh Mountain sheep in Snowdonia)
- Upland sheep farming supports traditional pastoral landscapes and contributes to the open moorland appearance that attracts tourists
- Farm incomes are often low; many farms depend on agri-environment scheme payments (e.g. Higher Level Stewardship grants) to remain viable
Forestry:
- Coniferous plantation forestry (primarily Sitka spruce and Scots pine) was developed across upland areas in the mid-20th century as part of national strategic timber reserves
- The Forestry Commission manages significant areas in the Lake District, Border Hills, and Galloway Forest Park
- Plantations provide timber, employment in rural areas, and carbon storage
- Large monoculture plantations are criticised for reducing biodiversity, blocking views, acidifying streams, and being visually intrusive in open upland landscapes
Tourism:
- The UK's glaciated uplands are primary tourism destinations
- The Lake District receives approximately 19 million visitor days per year and contributes around £1.4 billion to the regional economy
- Key tourism activities: walking and hiking (Wainwright's 214 fells), rock climbing and mountaineering, lake-based watersports (Windermere, Coniston), cycling, wildlife watching
- Snowdonia (Eryri) National Park receives approximately 4.3 million visitors per year; the Snowdon Mountain Railway carries approximately 140,000 passengers to the 1,085 m summit annually
- Tourism provides employment in accommodation, catering, guiding, and outdoor equipment retail
Quarrying:
- Historically, slate quarrying was a major industry in North Wales (Penrhyn Quarry, Dinorwig Quarry) and the Lake District (Honister Pass, Langdale)
- Penrhyn Quarry (Bethesda, North Wales) was once the world's largest slate quarry; at its peak in the 1890s it employed 3,000 workers and produced 130,000 tonnes of roofing slate per year
- Today, most large quarries have ceased or reduced operations; Honister Slate Mine is now primarily a tourist attraction offering mine tours and via ferrata
- The UNESCO Slate Landscape of Northwest Wales (designated 2021) recognises the industrial, cultural, and scenic heritage of the quarrying area — an example of development and conservation coexisting
- Hydroelectric power generation and reservoir water supply (extra context — beyond AQA 8035 spec): Dinorwig Power Station (1,728 MW pumped-storage HEP); Thirlmere and Haweswater reservoirs (water supply for Northwest England)
Conflicts Between Land Uses
The multiple users of glaciated upland landscapes frequently have competing interests. Conflicts are most visible in the UK's National Parks, where management must balance preservation with access and economic activity.
Farmers vs tourists:
- Walkers leaving footpaths cause soil erosion on fragile upland soils; gates left open let livestock escape; dogs disturb sheep (particularly at lambing season: March–April)
- Increased visitor numbers bring road congestion to narrow country lanes, affecting farm vehicle movements
Conservationists vs foresters:
- Large-scale coniferous plantations block views, reduce biodiversity of native species, acidify streams, and alter upland drainage patterns
- However, plantation forestry provides rural employment and managed timber
Tourism operators vs environmentalists:
- Motorised water sports (jet skis, speedboats) on Windermere create noise, wave damage to reed beds, and risk to wildlife; in 2005 a 10 mph speed limit was introduced on Windermere — resented by some tourism businesses but welcomed by wildlife groups and non-motorised watersports users
- Overuse of popular paths causes severe erosion: the Helvellyn and Scafell Pike paths sustain hundreds of thousands of boots per year — path "braiding" (multiple parallel routes widening the erosion scar to 5–10 m in places)
Quarrying and mining vs local communities:
- Slate quarrying and aggregate extraction create noise, dust, heavy vehicle traffic, and visual intrusion
- Local residents and tourist businesses oppose expansion of quarrying operations
Sheep farming vs rewilding:
- Conservation groups (e.g. Wild Ennerdale project, Trees for Life in Scotland) advocate reducing sheep numbers to allow native woodland to regenerate; upland sheep farmers oppose this as an existential threat to their livelihoods and cultural heritage
Management Strategies to Resolve Conflicts
UK glaciated uplands are predominantly managed within National Parks. The Lake District was designated a National Park in 1951 and achieved UNESCO World Heritage Site status in 2017. National Park Authorities (NPAs) use several tools to manage competing interests.
Path management:
- Severely eroded paths are repaired using pitching (laying natural stone slabs or setts to create a firm, durable surface that withstands heavy footfall)
- The Lake District National Park Authority spends approximately £800,000 per year on upland path repair
- Volunteer footpath repair teams (including Fix the Fells programme) maintain high-altitude routes
- Board walks and waymarking redirect walkers onto designated routes to limit spread of erosion
Traffic management:
- Honeypot sites — such as Grasmere, Ambleside, and Keswick — experience severe summer traffic congestion
- Park-and-ride schemes at Ambleside and Keswick reduce traffic entering villages
- Promotion of cycling and the Windermere Ferry as alternatives to car travel
Water sports management:
- The 10 mph speed limit on Windermere (introduced 2005): balances water sports access with wildlife conservation and quiet enjoyment
- Designated zones for different activities (e.g. motorised and non-motorised zones)
Zoning and planning:
- Strict planning controls limit new development within National Park boundaries; new buildings must use traditional materials and designs
- No new major quarrying or industrial development is approved in core landscape zones
Sustainable tourism initiatives:
- "Stay for a week" campaigns encourage visitors to spend longer per visit (distributing economic benefit while reducing the number of vehicles)
- Off-peak marketing promotes quieter seasons (autumn, winter) to reduce pressure on peak summer
Case Study: The Lake District National Park
Key facts:
- Area: 2,362 km² (England's largest National Park)
- Designated: 1951; UNESCO World Heritage Site: 2017
- Annual visits: approximately 19 million visitor days
- Population within the park boundary: approximately 42,000 permanent residents
Physical base:
- Glacially carved landscape: corrie tarns (Red Tarn, Blackmere, Bowscale Tarn), arêtes (Striding Edge, Sharp Edge), glacial troughs (Great Langdale, Borrowdale, Ullswater), ribbon lakes (Windermere, Ullswater, Coniston Water, Thirlmere, Haweswater)
- Highest peak: Scafell Pike (978 m) — England's highest mountain
Economic activities and their tensions:
| Activity | Benefit | Conflict / Challenge |
|---|---|---|
| Hill sheep farming (Herdwick) | Traditional landscape management; supports biodiversity of open fell; farm income | Low profitability; dependence on subsidies; rewilding debates threaten this land use |
| Tourism | £1.4 billion/year; 18,000 jobs in the wider economy | Traffic congestion; footpath erosion; second-home ownership drives up house prices, reducing affordability for locals |
| Water supply reservoirs (Thirlmere, Haweswater) | Water for Northwest England | Flooded two villages (Mardale Green, drowned under Haweswater, 1937); limited public access on reservoir catchment land |
| Forestry (Grizedale Forest, Whinlatter) | Timber; recreation (mountain biking, zip lines); habitat for red squirrels | Historic criticisms of view-blocking monoculture; older plantations being diversified with native broadleaf |
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Conflict and Management: Windermere Speed Limit
The introduction of a 10 mph speed limit on Windermere in 2005 illustrates how conflicts between development and conservation are managed in a National Park.
The conflict:
| Group | Position | Reason |
|---|---|---|
| Motorised watersports users and hire businesses | Opposed the limit | Claimed loss of livelihood; argued Windermere's size was sufficient to accommodate fast boats |
| Wildlife conservation organisations (RSPB, Lake District National Park Authority) | Supported the limit | Speedboats caused wave damage to reed-bed habitats of breeding birds (including great crested grebe); oil pollution risk; noise disruption |
| Non-motorised watersports users (kayakers, sailors, rowers, swimmers) | Supported the limit | Safety risk from fast craft; noise; wake destabilised small vessels |
| Lakeside residents | Majority supported the limit | Noise, reduced water quality, and amenity impacts |
The management decision: After years of consultation, the Lake District National Park Authority introduced the 10 mph limit in March 2005, covering the entire 16.9 km length of Windermere — the first speed limit on a natural lake in England.
Outcomes:
- Reed-bed habitats have partially recovered since 2005
- Shoreline erosion from boat wake has been reduced
- Water quality has improved
- Watersports tourism continues in non-motorised forms (kayaking, paddleboarding, sailing have grown)
- Motorised watersports providers that claimed losses ultimately relocated to other lakes or diversified
This case illustrates that development and conservation can be balanced through regulation — the economic function of tourism was maintained while conservation objectives were met.
Common Exam Mistakes
1. Treating tourism as only positive
Tourism brings economic benefits but also causes footpath erosion, traffic congestion, second-home price inflation, and noise. A complete answer presents both economic benefits (employment, income, supporting local businesses) and environmental/social costs.
2. Describing conflicts without naming the groups involved
A conflict answer must name the competing groups: "farmers and walkers" or "tourism businesses and wildlife conservation organisations" — not just "people disagree." Naming stakeholders and their specific interests demonstrates understanding of the conflict.
3. Forgetting that farming is a major land use alongside tourism
Many students focus exclusively on tourism when answering questions about glaciated upland economic activities. The spec requires farming, forestry, tourism, and quarrying. In an extended answer, cover all four land uses before discussing conflicts.
4. Mixing up physical and human geography in glaciation questions
Some questions ask about physical processes and landforms; others ask about human uses and management. Check the question carefully. Describing corries and arêtes when asked about land-use conflicts will not earn marks, however accurate the physical geography is.
5. Failing to link the physical landscape to the economic activities
The strongest answers show the connection: "the flat alluvial floor of the glacial trough is used for dairy farming, while the steep valley sides above support hill sheep grazing." The physical landscape determines which economic activities are viable — examiners reward this integration.
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