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DetailsOriginal Format: 16mm Colour: Black & White Sound: Silent Duration: 1 mins 30 secs Credits: Director Eli Simpson
Photography J. Tobin
Technician E. Percy
Subject: COUNTRYSIDE / LANDSCAPES RURAL LIFE
Summary In the summer of 1953, Eli Simpson set out to make a film for the British Speleological Association called The Birth of a Yorkshire River or The Waters of Mawn. The film collection is comprised of rushes he shot at locations such as Ingleborough Cave, Malham Cove, and Hull Pot, all located in the Yorkshire Dales, and many of the films include both interior and exterior footage of the caves.
Description
In the summer of 1953, Eli Simpson set out to make a film for the British Speleological Association called The Birth of a Yorkshire River or The Waters of Mawn. The film collection is comprised of rushes he shot at locations such as Ingleborough Cave, Malham Cove, and Hull Pot, all located in the Yorkshire Dales, and many of the films include both interior and exterior footage of the caves.
This film includes footage of the interior of Ingleborough Cave. The explorers make their way through...
In the summer of 1953, Eli Simpson set out to make a film for the British Speleological Association called The Birth of a Yorkshire River or The Waters of Mawn. The film collection is comprised of rushes he shot at locations such as Ingleborough Cave, Malham Cove, and Hull Pot, all located in the Yorkshire Dales, and many of the films include both interior and exterior footage of the caves.
This film includes footage of the interior of Ingleborough Cave. The explorers make their way through various caverns. They are all wearing helmets with lights attached. They walk through many pools of water and up a small waterfall. One of the men pretends he is unable to swim after having fallen down the waterfall.