The 'Howgill Fells' are a small group of
hills in Cumbria in northern
England, bounded approximately by a triangle drawn between
Sedbergh,
Kirkby Stephen and
Tebay. The southern half of the Howgill Fells is in the north-west corner of the
Yorkshire Dales national park although the northern Howgills are outside the
national park.
They are separated from the
Lake District to the west by the
River Lune (along which runs the
M6), and in the east by the
Dent fault, and are formed from
Ordovician and
Silurian rocks, rather than the
Carboniferous limestone elsewhere in the Yorkshire Dales.
The southern Howgill Fells are also the only part of the national park to be outside the county of
North Yorkshire, being just over the
Cumbrian border. Due to their position, the Howgill Fells give fine views of both the Lake District and the Yorkshire Dales.
Cautley Spout, a
waterfall in the south of the area, is considered to be England's highest waterfall, with a drop of about 180
m.
The Howgill Fells include two
Marilyns:
The Calf (676 m) and
Yarlside (639 m), and a number of smaller peaks, including five
Hewitts.