{{Use dmy dates|date=April 2022}} {{Infobox mountain | name = Little Hart Crag | image = Little_Hart_Crag_from_High_Hartsop_Dodd.jpg | image_caption = Little Hart Crag from High Hartsop Dodd with the crags of Black Brow on the right. | elevation_m = 637 | elevation_ref = | prominence_m = 34 | prominence_ref = | parent_peak = [[Dove Crag]] | listing = [[Hewitt (hill)|Hewitt]], [[Nuttall (hill)|Nuttall]], [[List of Wainwrights|Wainwright]] | location = [[Cumbria]], [[England]] | range = [[Lake District]], [[Eastern Fells]] | grid_ref_UK = NY387100 | topo = [[Ordnance Survey|OS]] ''Landranger'' 90 [[Ordnance Survey|OS]] ''Explorer'' 5, 7 | map = United Kingdom Lake District | map_caption = Location in Lake District, UK | coordinates = {{coord|54.48163|N|2.94762|W|type:mountain_scale:100000|format=dms|display=inline,title}} }}
'''Little Hart Crag''' is a [[fell]] in the [[Lake District]] area of [[England]]. It stands at the head of Scandale, {{convert|6|km|mile|abbr=off|spell=in|frac=4}} north of [[Ambleside]], at a height of {{convert|637|metres|foot}}. It is an eastern outlier of [[Dove Crag]] in the [[Eastern Fells]], although it does have {{convert|34|metre|ft}} of [[Topographic prominence|prominence]] from that fell making it both a [[List of Hewitts in England|Hewitt]] and a [[List of Nuttalls in England|Nuttall]] fell. It is frequently climbed as part of the Dovedale horseshoe, an {{convert|11|km|mile|abbr=off|adj=on|0}} walk over the neighbouring fells of [[Hartsop above How]], [[Hart Crag]], Dove Crag and [[High Hartsop Dodd]], starting and finishing at [[Brothers Water]].
==Topography== Little Hart Crag is composed of grassy slopes on its eastern slopes above the [[Scandale Pass]], with the tiny Scandale Tarn tucked in a hollow in the hill. To the east it drops steeply into Caiston Glen. On its west side it is connected to Dove Crag by the boggy hollow of Bakestone Moss and to the north east a ridge falls away towards [[Patterdale]] going over High Hartsop Dodd before dropping steeply to the valley. The fell is craggy on its northern side as the crags of Black Brow fall into Dovedale.
==Geology== The summit is an outcrop of Middle Dodd [[Dacite]], the underlying rock being [[volcaniclastic]] [[sandstone]].<ref name="BGS">[[British Geological Survey]]: 1:50,000 series maps, ''England & Wales Sheet 38'': BGS (1998)</ref>
==Summit== The summit is of interest, there being two distinct tops about {{convert|100|metre|ft|-1}} apart, both of whom are rocky. The western top is the higher and is marked by a [[cairn]], while the eastern one is more shapely but a few metres lower and has [[quartzite]] set into its rocks. The view from the top of the fell is restricted by higher fells, but it does give the opportunity of studying the crags of Dove Crag and [[Red Screes]] in detail.
==Ascents== Little Hart Crag is nearly always climbed in conjunction with other adjacent fells, there being no feasible direct ascent although it can be climbed from Patterdale via the top of the Scandale Pass. The most direct route from Patterdale starts at Brothers Water and firstly ascends High Hartsop Dodd before continuing to the summit of Little Hart Crag. Also from Patterdale the fell can also be climbed in conjunction with Red Screes or Dove Crag and even [[Fairfield (Lake District)|Fairfield]].
== References == * A Pictorial Guide to the Lakeland Fells, Eastern Fells, Alfred Wainwright, {{ISBN|0-7112-2454-4}} * Complete Lakeland Fells, Bill Birkett, {{ISBN|0-00-713629-3}} * The Mountains of England and Wales, John and Anne Nuttall {{ISBN|1-85284-037-4}} {{reflist}} {{Eastern Fells}}
[[Category:Hewitts of England]] [[Category:Fells of the Lake District]] [[Category:Nuttalls]] [[Category:Patterdale]]