Authors: Rob Cowen
Early Yorkshire Charters Volumes I and IX, based on manuscripts of the late William Farrer, Charles Travis Clay CB, FBA (ed.), Yorkshire Archaeological Society Record Series, 1952.
Arnold Kellett,
Historic Knaresborough
, Smith Settle Ltd, Otley, 1991.
Arnold Kellett,
The Knaresborough Story
, Lofthouse Publications, Pontefract, 1990.
Nicky Milner, Barry Taylor, Chantal Conneller and Tim Schadla-Hall,
Star Carr: Life in Britain After the Ice Age
, Council for British Archaeology, 2013.
J.G.D. Clark,
Excavations at Star Carr
, Cambridge University Prress, Cambridge, 1954.
T. Clare, âBefore the first woodland clearings',
British Archaeology 8
,
http://www.britarch.ac.uk/ba/ba8/BA8FEAT.HTML
, 1995.
R. Chatterton, âStar Carr reanalysed', in J. Moore and L. Bevan (eds.)
Peopling the Mesolithic in a Northern Environment
, Archaeopress, Oxford, British Archaeological Reports International Series 1157, 2003.
C.J. Conneller, âStar Carr recontextualised', in J. Moore and L. Bevan (eds),
Peopling the Mesolithic in a Northern Environment
, Archaeopress, Oxford, British Archaeological Reports International Series 955, 2003.
Brian G. Dias & Kerry J. Ressler, âParental olfactory experience influences behavior and neural structure in subsequent generations',
Nature Neuroscience 17
, 2013.
Nessa Carey,
The Epigenetics Revolution: How Modern Biology is Rewriting Our Understanding of Genetics, Disease and Inheritance
, Icon Books Ltd, 2012.
Benjamin Elliott, âAntlerworking practices in Mesolithic Britain', PhD thesis, University of York, Department of Archaeology, 2012.
E. Percival and H. Whitehead,
Observations on the Biology of the Mayfly, Ephemera Danica, Mull
, reprint from the Leeds Philosophical Society, Leeds, 1926.
Malcolm Greenhalgh,
The Mayfly and the Trout
, The Medlar Press, Ellesmere, 2011.
Paul Giller and Bjorn Malmqvist,
The Biology of Streams and Rivers
, Oxford University Press, Oxford, 1998.
Gary Lafontaine,
The Challenge of the Trout
, Mountain Press, Missoula, 1983.
Chris Kightley, Steve Madge and Dave Nurney,
The Pocket Guide to the Birds of Britain and North-West Europe
, Pica Press, 1998.
R.S.R. Fitter,
Collins Pocket Guide to British Birds
, Collins, 1966.
Mark Cocker and Richard Mabey,
Birds Britannica
, Chatto & Windus, 2005.
David Lack,
Swifts in a Tower
, Methuen, 1956.
Derek Bromhall,
Devil Birds: The Life of the Swift
, Hutchinson, 1980.
Andrew Lack and Roy Overall,
The Museum Swifts
, Oxford University Museum of Natural History, Oxford, 2002.
Graham Appleton, âSwifts start to share their secrets',
British Trust for Ornithology (BTO) News
, MayâJune 2012.
HÃ¥kan Karlsson, Per Henningsson, Johan Bäckman, Anders Hedenström and Thomas Alerstam, âCompensation for wind drift by migrating swifts',
Animal Behaviour
, Volume 80, Issue 3, September 2010.
Johan Bäckman and Thomas Alerstam, âHarmonic oscillatory orientation relative to the wind in nocturnal roosting flights of the swift
Apus apus
',
Journal of Experimental Biology
, 11 December 2001.
Elizabeth Day, âRevealed: how the swift keeps to its course at 10,000ft â even as it sleeps',
Telegraph
, 14 March 2004.
Robert Furness, J. D. D. Greenwood,
Birds as Monitors of Environmental Change
, Springer (soft-cover reprint of 1st edition, 1993), 2013.
Bob Hume, âLearning About Birds: Swift',
Birds Magazine (RSPB)
, as it appears on
http://www.stocklinch.org.uk/Swift.htm
, accessed 29 July 2012.
Peter Berthold, Hans-Günther Bauer and Valerie Westhead,
Bird Migration: A General Survey
, Oxford University Press, Oxford, 2001.
S. Ã
kesson, R. Klaassen, J. Holmgren, J.W. Fox and A. Hedenström, âMigration routes and strategies in a highly aerial migrant, the common swift
Apus apus
, revealed by light-level geolocators',
PLoS One
,
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22815968
, 2012.
1
âThey've made it again': Ted Hughes, âSwifts', as featured in
The Poetry of Birds
, Viking, 2009, edited by Simon Armitage and Tim Dee.
2
âNaturalist Richard Mabey wrote of being struck by an unavoidable allegory': the article in question is from 2009 and appears in his collection
A Brush With Nature: 25 years of personal reflections on nature
, BBC Books, 2010.
W. Wiltschko, U. Munro, H. Ford and R. Wiltschko, âBird navigation: what type of information does the magnetite-based receptor provide?',
Proceedings of the Royal Society
, B 273 (1603),
www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1664630/
, 22 November 2006.
Mark E. Deutschlander, John B. Phillips and S. Chris Borland, âThe Case for Light-Dependent Magnetic Orientation in Animals',
Journal of Experimental Biology
, 22 March 1999.
For more on the common swift, its diet, migrations, habits and habitats, see (and support) the fantastic:
http://www.swift-conservation.org
.
1
âNow I am ready to tell how bodies are changed': Ted Hughes,
Tales from Ovid: 24 Passages from the Metamorphoses
, Faber & Faber, 2002.
R.H Deaton,
Small Rodents of the Harrogate District
, Harrogate and District Naturalists' Society, Harrogate, 1988.
M. Barnham and G.T. Foggitt,
Butterflies in the Harrogate District
, Harrogate and District Naturalists' Society, Harrogate, 1987.
Joseph Moucha,
A familiar colour guide to familiar Butterflies, Caterpillars and Chrysalides
, Octopus, 1978.
Ferris Jabr, âHow Does a Caterpillar Turn into a Butterfly?', in
Scientific American
, 10 August 2012.
Editorial, M. S. Warren et al., âRapid responses of British butterflies to opposing forces of climate and habitat change',
Nature
, 414, 65â9, 1 November 2001.
2
âA biting east wind brought the temperature down to -1°C': Newsletter No. 17 of the Bilton Conservation Group, Winter 1985/6, âThe Wildlife of the Nidd Gorge in Winter' (Secretary: Keith Wilkinson).
Newsletter of the Bilton Conservation Group dated âSpring 2007'.
Study by Cobham Resource Consultants for the Council of the Borough of Harrogate, âNidd Gorge and Bilton Fields: Proposals for the Management of the Countryside on the northern and eastern fringes of Harrogate', March 1983.
Peter Barnes (ed.), âBilton with Harrogate â Forest, Farms and Families', Report of a Community Archaeological Project by Bilton Historical Society, 2008.
Christopher Brickell (ed.-in-chief),
The Royal Horticultural Society Encyclopedia of Gardening
, Dorling Kindersley Ltd, 1992.
Richard Mabey,
Flora Britannica
, Chatto & Windus/Sinclair Stevenson, 1996.
David D. Stuart,
Buddlejas (Royal Horticultural Society Plant Collector Guide)
, Timber Press, 2006.
For more information on SUSTRANS, the sustainable transport charity, see:
http://www.sustrans.org.uk
.
For more information on butterflies as an indicator species, including reports, see the United Kingdom Butterfly Monitoring Scheme:
http://www.ukbms.org/indicators.aspx
.
Various local history sources and websites proved invaluable in the research of the fate of the âLeeds Pals' during the First World War. Few records prove as evocative however, as the words of Private A.V. Pearson, speaking about his battalion after the war: âThe name of Serre and the date of 1st July is engraved deep in our hearts, along with the faces of our
Pals
, a grand crowd of chaps. We were two years in the making and ten minutes in the destroying.' An overview of the battalion's formation can be found on the Wartime Memories Project website (archived by the British Library), which also sheds light on the ferocity faced by its soldiers on their first engagement in the war: âThe 15th Battalion, West Yorkshire Regiment (1st Leeds Pals) was raised in Leeds in September 1914 by the Lord Mayor and City. After training locally, the Battalion joined the 93rd Brigade, 31st Division, in May 1915 and moved to South Camp, Ripon and later to Hurdcott Camp near Salisbury. In December that year they set sail for Alexandria in Egypt to defend the Suez Canal before, in March 1916, the entire 31st Division left Port Said aboard
HMT Briton
bound for Marseilles in France, a journey that lasted five days. They travelled by train to Pont Remy, a few miles south-east of Abbeville, and marched to Bertrancourt arriving on 29 March 1916. Their first taste of action was at Serre on the first day of the Somme where they suffered heavy casualties as the battle was launched.' For more information see:
http://www.wartimememoriesproject.com/greatwar/allied/westyorkshireregiment15.php
and
http://www.leeds-pals.com
.
For a comprehensive breakdown of the battle of Serre on 1 July 1916, see:
http://www.ww1battlefields.co.uk/somme/serre.html
.
Recorded losses for the battalion, sustained in the few minutes after Zero, were 24 officers and 504 other ranks, of which 15 officers and 233 other ranks were killed. Despite the Commander-in-Chief, Douglas Haig, commenting negatively on the performance of VIII Corps on the 1 July 1916 in his diary â Gary Sheffield and John Bourne (ed.),
Douglas Haig: War Diaries & Letters 1914â1918
, Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 2005 â the Official British History recognises the efforts made by the men, many of who had never been in action before. In Brigadier-General Sir James E. Edmonds,
Military Operations France and Belgium 1916, Sir Douglas Haig's Command to the 1st July: Battle of the Somme: Volume I
, 1932, it states: âThere was no wavering or attempting to come back, the men fell in their ranks, mostly before the first hundred yards of No Mans Land had been crossed. The magnificent gallantry, discipline and determination displayed by all ranks of this North Country division were of no avail against the concentrated fire-effect of the enemy's unshaken infantry and artillery.'
Laurie Milner,
Leeds Pals: History of the 15th (Service) Battalion (1st Leeds) the Prince of Wales' Own (West Yorkshire Regiment), 1914â18
, Wharncliffe Books, Barnsley, 1993.
Major and Mrs Holt,
Battlefield Guide to the Somme
, Pen and Sword Books Ltd, Barnsley, 2008.
Chris McCarthy,
The Somme
:
The Day-by-Day Account
, Caxton Editions, 2000.
Martin Middlebrook,
The First Day on the Somme
, Penguin Books, 1984.
Martin and Mary Middlebrook,
The Middlebrook Guide to the Somme Battlefields: A Comprehensive Coverage from Crecy to the World Wars
, Pen and Sword Books Ltd, 2007.
Paul Reed,
Walking the Somme
, Pen and Sword Books Ltd, Barnsley, 1997.
Dylan Trigg, âThe Memory of Place: a Phenomenology of the Uncanny', as it appears on academia.edu:
http://www.academia.edu/355785/The_Memory_of_Place_a_Phenomenology_of_the_Uncanny
.
Prepared by order of W. Patrick, Esq., âThe Particulars and Plan of Bilton Hall Estate, to be offered for sale by auction by Renton & Renton, Wednesday the 4th day of June, 1924', accessed at Harrogate Library, 2012.
âNorth Harrogate Residents Consultative Group', pamphlet detailing proposals for housing and relief road to Skipton Road through Knox, Bachelor Gardens, Bilton, Starbeck, 1985. Under âFact One': âThe six miles of road is projected as a three-lane highway. It is more than an idea, it is an imminent reality'; under âFact Two': âThe intended road will facilitate a huge housing and industrial venture, expanding Harrogate beyond recognition', accessed at Harrogate Library, 2012.
Tony Cheal,
Bilton Residents 1882â1899
, listing document produced for the Bilton Historical Society, Harrogate, May 1996.
Jack Kerouac,
On the Road
, Penguin Modern Classics, 2000.
Michael Clark,
Badgers
, Whittet Books Ltd, 1988.
Fiona Harvey, âBadger culling is ineffective, says architect of 10-year trial',
Guardian
, 11 July 2011.
Patrick Barkham, âSlaughtering badgers is not the answer to bovine TB',
Guardian
, 15 December 2011.
Damian Carrington and Jamie Doward, âBadger cull “mindless”, say scientists',
Observer
, 13 October 2012.
Patrick Barkham, âDo we have to shoot the badgers?',
Guardian
, 6 August 2011.
Richard Black, âBadger cull “may worsen problem”', BBC News, Science/Environment,
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-11303939
, 15 September 2010.
Angela Cassidy, âVermin, Victims and Disease: UK Framings of Badgers In and Beyond the Bovine TB Controversy',
Sociologia Ruralis
, Volume 52, Issue 2, April 2012.
1
On Owen Paterson tabling 600 questions regarding badger control in opposition, see Hansard, Common Debates, Column 1062,
http://www.publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm201213/cmhansrd/cm121025/debtext/121025-0001.htm
, 25 October 2012.
Damian Carrington, âOwen Paterson: true blue countryman putting wind up green campaigners',
Guardian
, 11 October 2012.
Damian Carrington, âOwen Paterson's climate change problem: cock-up or conspiracy?',
Guardian
, 7 September 2012.