Dodd Fell Hill
Dodd Fell Hill is a hill in the Yorkshire Dales, in North Yorkshire, England. It is classed as a Marilyn and its summit is at. The flat summit, known as Dodd Fell Hill, is marked by a concrete trig-point. The hill has a lower summit known as Ten End, which is to the north, and slightly lower at above sea level.
The name of Dodd Fell is derived from the Middle English Dodde, and the Old Norse Fjall, meaning the hill with the rounded top.
Water flowing off the hill to the north-east forms Duerley Beck, and runs down Sleddale and becomes a tributary of the River Ure. Water flowing to the north runs through Snaizeholme, a side dale of Widdale, and the high ridge between the summit of Dodd Fell and Snaizeholme is traversed by the Pennine Way.
| Year | Rainfall | Notes | Ref |
| 1968 | Location is on the high ground between Dodd Fell and Wether Fell | ||
| 1969 | |||
| 1970 |