Morcott Brook

The Morcott Brook, also known locally as "The Foss", is a small watercourse in Rutland in the East Midlands of England. It is a tributary of the River Chater and part of the River Welland catchment.

Morcott Brook
The Morcott Brook between Glaston and Morcott
Location of the river mouth in Rutland
Location
CountryEngland
CountyRutland
Physical characteristics
Source 
  locationRidlington, Rutland
  coordinates52.611053°N 0.753478°W / 52.611053; -0.753478
  elevation152 m (499 ft)
MouthRiver Chater
  location
South Luffenham, Rutland
  coordinates
52.613292°N 0.609722°W / 52.613292; -0.609722
  elevation
49 m (161 ft)
Length12.2 km (7.6 mi)
Basin size20.9 km2 (8.1 sq mi)
Basin features
River systemRiver Welland

Course

The Morcott Brook rises near Ridlington and flows in an easterly direction through a narrow valley past Ayston and between Glaston and Wing where it picks up a small amount of flow from an unnamed tributary rising near Preston. It continues eastwards, passing to the north of Morcott where it turns sharply towards the north-east and passes through the centre of South Luffenham. Upon leaving the village, it soon passes under the Birmingham to Peterborough Railway Line and joins the River Chater near the former Luffenham railway station.

Status

In 2016, the overall classification of the Morcott Brook was 'Bad' under the Water Framework Directive for reasons of physical modification and artificial barriers and their negative effect on fish, poor nutrient and livestock management in the surrounding agricultural land and continuous discharge of treated sewage effluent.[1]

gollark: It is VERY annoying that the last one has just four (4) integers in it and not five (5).
gollark: See, if you just iterate through all possible programs in some language, and see which one first produces those outputs given those inputs, you will have a solution.
gollark: Actually, I didn't.
gollark: Oh, wait, I think this can probably be done in a somewhat insane way which is *technically* not a lookup table.
gollark: This is EXTREMELY anomalously apioioio.

References

  1. "Morcott Brook: Catchment Data Explorer". environment.data.gov.uk.
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