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  1. Living Uplands explores the many and diverse characteristics of an environment that sustains rich flora, protects endangered British fauna and wildlife, and is a carbon capturing colossus of deep peatland reserves.

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  2. Feb 14, 2019 · The uplands enhance beauty, heritage and engagement with the natural environment. From Dartmoor to Derbyshire, the Pennines to the Peaks, upland and hill farming plays a pivotal role in helping to enhance our much loved landscapes, with over 70% of the uplands within designated landscapes.

  3. To experience the rugged uplands and brooding moorlands of Britain there are no places better than the Peak District NP, at the southern end of the Pennine Range, the world-famous Lake District NP (of William Wordsworth (1770-1850) and Alfred Wainwright (1907-1991) fame), with its almost alpine scenery and glacial lakes, Snowdonia NP in the ...

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  4. Pennines, major upland mass forming a relief “backbone,” or “spine,” in the north of England, extending southward from Northumberland into Derbyshire. The uplands have a short, steep western slope and dip gently eastward. They are surrounded on the east, west, and south by the Vale of York, the

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
    • How Diverse Is The Landscape of The UK?
    • Where Are The UK’s Uplands?
    • Where Are The UK’s Lowlands?
    • Where Are The UK’s River Systems?

    The landscapeof the UK varies significantly. For example, there are spectacular mountain ranges in Scotland, rolling hills and valleys in many central and southern areas and extensive flat plains in East Anglia. The physical geography of the UK was formed through geological, fluvial, glacial, erosional and tectonic processes. As a result, there is ...

    The majority of the UK’s upland areas are located in the north and west of the country. These areas are mainly formed from igneous (volcanic) and metamorphic rock. Tough igneous and metamorphic rocks, such as granite and slate, form most of the mountains, such as the Grampians and the north-west Highlands in Scotland and the Lake District in northw...

    Lowlands are typically found around the coast and in the south and east. These areas are mainly made up of sedimentary rock. Much of East Anglia and Lincolnshire is made up of weak sedimentary clays, forming flat agricultural plains. Broad valleys, known as vales, occur throughout southern England in between limestone and chalk escarpments. A rift ...

    The UK has extensive river systems. Most rivers have their source in upland areas and form large river basins. These are large areas of land drained by a river and its tributaries. At 352 km, the longest river in the UK is the River Severn, which has its source in the Cambrian Mountains in Wales. The River Thames is a close second at 344 km. Severa...

  5. The Southern Uplands (Scottish Gaelic: Na Monaidhean a Deas) are the southernmost and least populous of mainland Scotland's three major geographic areas (the others being the Central Lowlands and the Highlands).

  6. The uplands and moorlands of England are home to half of the UK's sites of scientific interest and a huge 74% of national parks in England are classed as a moorland or upland. This ancient landscape has hundreds, if not thousands of species of plants, one of the best-known being heather of which England's moors hold 70% of the worlds heather.