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  • Landscape view looking from Brown Clee Hill out over the Shropshire Hills, a designated Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty on 12th November 2019 near Burwarton, Shropshire, United Kingdom. The Shropshire Hills, located in the Welsh Marches, are relatively high: the highest point in the county, Brown Clee Hill, near Ludlow, has an altitude of 540 metres.
    20191112_shropshire hills_013.jpg
  • Landscape view looking from Brown Clee Hill out over the Shropshire Hills, a designated Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty on 12th November 2019 near Burwarton, Shropshire, United Kingdom. The Shropshire Hills, located in the Welsh Marches, are relatively high: the highest point in the county, Brown Clee Hill, near Ludlow, has an altitude of 540 metres.
    20191112_shropshire hills_004.jpg
  • Landscape view looking from Brown Clee Hill out over the Shropshire Hills, a designated Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty on 13th November 2019 near Burwarton, Shropshire, United Kingdom. The Shropshire Hills, located in the Welsh Marches, are relatively high: the highest point in the county, Brown Clee Hill, near Ludlow, has an altitude of 540 metres.
    20191113_shropshire hills_023.jpg
  • Landscape view looking from Brown Clee Hill out over the Shropshire Hills, a designated Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty on 13th November 2019 near Burwarton, Shropshire, United Kingdom. The Shropshire Hills, located in the Welsh Marches, are relatively high: the highest point in the county, Brown Clee Hill, near Ludlow, has an altitude of 540 metres.
    20191113_shropshire hills_022.jpg
  • Landscape view looking from Brown Clee Hill out over the Shropshire Hills, a designated Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty on 12th November 2019 near Burwarton, Shropshire, United Kingdom. The Shropshire Hills, located in the Welsh Marches, are relatively high: the highest point in the county, Brown Clee Hill, near Ludlow, has an altitude of 540 metres.
    20191112_shropshire hills_008.jpg
  • Landscape view looking from Brown Clee Hill out over the Shropshire Hills, a designated Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty on 13th November 2019 near Burwarton, Shropshire, United Kingdom. The Shropshire Hills, located in the Welsh Marches, are relatively high: the highest point in the county, Brown Clee Hill, near Ludlow, has an altitude of 540 metres.
    20191113_shropshire hills_020.jpg
  • Landscape view looking from Brown Clee Hill out over the Shropshire Hills, a designated Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty on 12th November 2019 near Burwarton, Shropshire, United Kingdom. The Shropshire Hills, located in the Welsh Marches, are relatively high: the highest point in the county, Brown Clee Hill, near Ludlow, has an altitude of 540 metres.
    20191112_shropshire hills_005.jpg
  • Landscape view looking from Brown Clee Hill out over the Shropshire Hills, a designated Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty on 13th November 2019 near Burwarton, Shropshire, United Kingdom. The Shropshire Hills, located in the Welsh Marches, are relatively high: the highest point in the county, Brown Clee Hill, near Ludlow, has an altitude of 540 metres.
    20191113_shropshire hills_021.jpg
  • Landscape view looking from Brown Clee Hill out over the Shropshire Hills, a designated Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty on 12th November 2019 near Burwarton, Shropshire, United Kingdom. The Shropshire Hills, located in the Welsh Marches, are relatively high: the highest point in the county, Brown Clee Hill, near Ludlow, has an altitude of 540 metres.
    20191112_shropshire hills_006.jpg
  • Landscape view looking from Brown Clee Hill out over the Shropshire Hills, a designated Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty on 12th November 2019 near Burwarton, Shropshire, United Kingdom. The Shropshire Hills, located in the Welsh Marches, are relatively high: the highest point in the county, Brown Clee Hill, near Ludlow, has an altitude of 540 metres.
    20191112_shropshire hills_010.jpg
  • Landscape view looking from the top of Brown Clee Hill out over the Shropshire Hills, a designated Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty on 13th November 2019 near Burwarton, Shropshire, United Kingdom. The Shropshire Hills, located in the Welsh Marches, are relatively high: the highest point in the county, Brown Clee Hill, near Ludlow, has an altitude of 540 metres.
    20191113_shropshire hills_017.jpg
  • Landscape view looking from Brown Clee Hill out over the Shropshire Hills, a designated Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty on 13th November 2019 near Burwarton, Shropshire, United Kingdom. The Shropshire Hills, located in the Welsh Marches, are relatively high: the highest point in the county, Brown Clee Hill, near Ludlow, has an altitude of 540 metres.
    20191113_shropshire hills_014.jpg
  • Landscape view looking from Brown Clee Hill out over the Shropshire Hills, a designated Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty on 13th November 2019 near Burwarton, Shropshire, United Kingdom. The Shropshire Hills, located in the Welsh Marches, are relatively high: the highest point in the county, Brown Clee Hill, near Ludlow, has an altitude of 540 metres.
    20191113_shropshire hills panorama_0...jpg
  • Landscape view looking from Brown Clee Hill out over the Shropshire Hills, a designated Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty on 13th November 2019 near Burwarton, Shropshire, United Kingdom. The Shropshire Hills, located in the Welsh Marches, are relatively high: the highest point in the county, Brown Clee Hill, near Ludlow, has an altitude of 540 metres.
    20191113_shropshire hills panorama_0...jpg
  • Landscape view looking from Brown Clee Hill out over the Shropshire Hills, a designated Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty on 12th November 2019 near Burwarton, Shropshire, United Kingdom. The Shropshire Hills, located in the Welsh Marches, are relatively high: the highest point in the county, Brown Clee Hill, near Ludlow, has an altitude of 540 metres.
    20191112_shropshire hills_011.jpg
  • Landscape view looking from Brown Clee Hill out over the Shropshire Hills, a designated Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty on 12th November 2019 near Burwarton, Shropshire, United Kingdom. The Shropshire Hills, located in the Welsh Marches, are relatively high: the highest point in the county, Brown Clee Hill, near Ludlow, has an altitude of 540 metres.
    20191112_shropshire hills_002.jpg
  • Landscape view looking from Brown Clee Hill out over the Shropshire Hills, a designated Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty on 13th November 2019 near Burwarton, Shropshire, United Kingdom. The Shropshire Hills, located in the Welsh Marches, are relatively high: the highest point in the county, Brown Clee Hill, near Ludlow, has an altitude of 540 metres.
    20191113_shropshire hills_019.jpg
  • Landscape view looking from the top of Brown Clee Hill out over the Shropshire Hills, a designated Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty on 13th November 2019 near Burwarton, Shropshire, United Kingdom. The Shropshire Hills, located in the Welsh Marches, are relatively high: the highest point in the county, Brown Clee Hill, near Ludlow, has an altitude of 540 metres.
    20191113_shropshire hills_016.jpg
  • Landscape view looking from Brown Clee Hill out over the Shropshire Hills, a designated Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty on 13th November 2019 near Burwarton, Shropshire, United Kingdom. The Shropshire Hills, located in the Welsh Marches, are relatively high: the highest point in the county, Brown Clee Hill, near Ludlow, has an altitude of 540 metres.
    20191113_shropshire hills panorama_0...jpg
  • Landscape view looking from Brown Clee Hill out over the Shropshire Hills, a designated Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty on 12th November 2019 near Burwarton, Shropshire, United Kingdom. The Shropshire Hills, located in the Welsh Marches, are relatively high: the highest point in the county, Brown Clee Hill, near Ludlow, has an altitude of 540 metres.
    20191112_shropshire hills_007.jpg
  • Landscape view looking from Brown Clee Hill out over the Shropshire Hills, a designated Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty on 12th November 2019 near Burwarton, Shropshire, United Kingdom. The Shropshire Hills, located in the Welsh Marches, are relatively high: the highest point in the county, Brown Clee Hill, near Ludlow, has an altitude of 540 metres.
    20191112_shropshire hills_003.jpg
  • Landscape view looking from Brown Clee Hill out over the Shropshire Hills, a designated Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty on 12th November 2019 near Burwarton, Shropshire, United Kingdom. The Shropshire Hills, located in the Welsh Marches, are relatively high: the highest point in the county, Brown Clee Hill, near Ludlow, has an altitude of 540 metres.
    20191112_shropshire hills_001.jpg
  • Landscape view looking from Brown Clee Hill out over the Shropshire Hills, a designated Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty on 12th November 2019 near Burwarton, Shropshire, United Kingdom. The Shropshire Hills, located in the Welsh Marches, are relatively high: the highest point in the county, Brown Clee Hill, near Ludlow, has an altitude of 540 metres.
    20191112_shropshire hills_012.jpg
  • Landscape view looking from Brown Clee Hill out over the Shropshire Hills, a designated Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty on 13th November 2019 near Burwarton, Shropshire, United Kingdom. The Shropshire Hills, located in the Welsh Marches, are relatively high: the highest point in the county, Brown Clee Hill, near Ludlow, has an altitude of 540 metres.
    20191113_shropshire hills panorama.jpg
  • Landscape view looking from Brown Clee Hill out over the Shropshire Hills, a designated Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty on 12th November 2019 near Burwarton, Shropshire, United Kingdom. The Shropshire Hills, located in the Welsh Marches, are relatively high: the highest point in the county, Brown Clee Hill, near Ludlow, has an altitude of 540 metres.
    20191112_shropshire hills_009.jpg
  • View from Titterstone Clee Hill looking towards Brown Clee Hill on 22nd July 2020 in Cleedownton, United Kingdom. Titterstone Clee Hill, sometimes referred to as Titterstone Clee or, incorrectly, Clee Hill, is a prominent hill in the rural English county of Shropshire, rising at the summit to 533 metres above sea level. It is one of the Clee Hills, in the Shropshire Hills Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty. Most of the summit of the hill is affected by man-made activity, the result of hill fort construction during the Bronze and Iron Ages and, more recently, by years of mining for coal and quarrying for dolerite, known locally as dhustone, for use in road-building. Many derelict quarry buildings scattered over the hill are of industrial archaeological interest as very early examples of the use of reinforced concrete. Several radar domes and towers operate on the summit of the hill. The largest of the radar arrays is part of the National Air Traffic Services NATS radar network, and covers one of 30 overlapping regions of UK airspace. The one on Titterstone Clee monitors all aircraft within a 100-mile radius.
    20200722_titterstone clee hill_028.jpg
  • View from Titterstone Clee Hill looking towards Brown Clee Hill on 22nd July 2020 in Cleedownton, United Kingdom. Titterstone Clee Hill, sometimes referred to as Titterstone Clee or, incorrectly, Clee Hill, is a prominent hill in the rural English county of Shropshire, rising at the summit to 533 metres above sea level. It is one of the Clee Hills, in the Shropshire Hills Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty. Most of the summit of the hill is affected by man-made activity, the result of hill fort construction during the Bronze and Iron Ages and, more recently, by years of mining for coal and quarrying for dolerite, known locally as dhustone, for use in road-building. Many derelict quarry buildings scattered over the hill are of industrial archaeological interest as very early examples of the use of reinforced concrete. Several radar domes and towers operate on the summit of the hill. The largest of the radar arrays is part of the National Air Traffic Services NATS radar network, and covers one of 30 overlapping regions of UK airspace. The one on Titterstone Clee monitors all aircraft within a 100-mile radius.
    20200722_titterstone clee hill_029.jpg
  • View from Titterstone Clee Hill looking towards Brown Clee Hill on 22nd July 2020 in Cleedownton, United Kingdom. Titterstone Clee Hill, sometimes referred to as Titterstone Clee or, incorrectly, Clee Hill, is a prominent hill in the rural English county of Shropshire, rising at the summit to 533 metres above sea level. It is one of the Clee Hills, in the Shropshire Hills Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty. Most of the summit of the hill is affected by man-made activity, the result of hill fort construction during the Bronze and Iron Ages and, more recently, by years of mining for coal and quarrying for dolerite, known locally as dhustone, for use in road-building. Many derelict quarry buildings scattered over the hill are of industrial archaeological interest as very early examples of the use of reinforced concrete. Several radar domes and towers operate on the summit of the hill. The largest of the radar arrays is part of the National Air Traffic Services NATS radar network, and covers one of 30 overlapping regions of UK airspace. The one on Titterstone Clee monitors all aircraft within a 100-mile radius.
    20200722_titterstone clee hill_031.jpg
  • View from Titterstone Clee Hill looking towards Brown Clee Hill on 22nd July 2020 in Cleedownton, United Kingdom. Titterstone Clee Hill, sometimes referred to as Titterstone Clee or, incorrectly, Clee Hill, is a prominent hill in the rural English county of Shropshire, rising at the summit to 533 metres above sea level. It is one of the Clee Hills, in the Shropshire Hills Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty. Most of the summit of the hill is affected by man-made activity, the result of hill fort construction during the Bronze and Iron Ages and, more recently, by years of mining for coal and quarrying for dolerite, known locally as dhustone, for use in road-building. Many derelict quarry buildings scattered over the hill are of industrial archaeological interest as very early examples of the use of reinforced concrete. Several radar domes and towers operate on the summit of the hill. The largest of the radar arrays is part of the National Air Traffic Services NATS radar network, and covers one of 30 overlapping regions of UK airspace. The one on Titterstone Clee monitors all aircraft within a 100-mile radius.
    20200722_titterstone clee hill_026.jpg
  • View from Titterstone Clee Hill looking towards Brown Clee Hill on 22nd July 2020 in Cleedownton, United Kingdom. Titterstone Clee Hill, sometimes referred to as Titterstone Clee or, incorrectly, Clee Hill, is a prominent hill in the rural English county of Shropshire, rising at the summit to 533 metres above sea level. It is one of the Clee Hills, in the Shropshire Hills Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty. Most of the summit of the hill is affected by man-made activity, the result of hill fort construction during the Bronze and Iron Ages and, more recently, by years of mining for coal and quarrying for dolerite, known locally as dhustone, for use in road-building. Many derelict quarry buildings scattered over the hill are of industrial archaeological interest as very early examples of the use of reinforced concrete. Several radar domes and towers operate on the summit of the hill. The largest of the radar arrays is part of the National Air Traffic Services NATS radar network, and covers one of 30 overlapping regions of UK airspace. The one on Titterstone Clee monitors all aircraft within a 100-mile radius.
    20200722_titterstone clee hill_023.jpg
  • View from Titterstone Clee Hill looking towards Brown Clee Hill on 22nd July 2020 in Cleedownton, United Kingdom. Titterstone Clee Hill, sometimes referred to as Titterstone Clee or, incorrectly, Clee Hill, is a prominent hill in the rural English county of Shropshire, rising at the summit to 533 metres above sea level. It is one of the Clee Hills, in the Shropshire Hills Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty. Most of the summit of the hill is affected by man-made activity, the result of hill fort construction during the Bronze and Iron Ages and, more recently, by years of mining for coal and quarrying for dolerite, known locally as dhustone, for use in road-building. Many derelict quarry buildings scattered over the hill are of industrial archaeological interest as very early examples of the use of reinforced concrete. Several radar domes and towers operate on the summit of the hill. The largest of the radar arrays is part of the National Air Traffic Services NATS radar network, and covers one of 30 overlapping regions of UK airspace. The one on Titterstone Clee monitors all aircraft within a 100-mile radius.
    20200722_titterstone clee hill_030.jpg
  • View from Titterstone Clee Hill looking towards Brown Clee Hill on 22nd July 2020 in Cleedownton, United Kingdom. Titterstone Clee Hill, sometimes referred to as Titterstone Clee or, incorrectly, Clee Hill, is a prominent hill in the rural English county of Shropshire, rising at the summit to 533 metres above sea level. It is one of the Clee Hills, in the Shropshire Hills Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty. Most of the summit of the hill is affected by man-made activity, the result of hill fort construction during the Bronze and Iron Ages and, more recently, by years of mining for coal and quarrying for dolerite, known locally as dhustone, for use in road-building. Many derelict quarry buildings scattered over the hill are of industrial archaeological interest as very early examples of the use of reinforced concrete. Several radar domes and towers operate on the summit of the hill. The largest of the radar arrays is part of the National Air Traffic Services NATS radar network, and covers one of 30 overlapping regions of UK airspace. The one on Titterstone Clee monitors all aircraft within a 100-mile radius.
    20200722_titterstone clee hill_027.jpg
  • Tiny mushroom growing on a branch in the Shropshire Hills, a designated Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty on 13th November 2019 near Burwarton, Shropshire, United Kingdom. The Shropshire Hills, located in the Welsh Marches, are relatively high: the highest point in the county, Brown Clee Hill, near Ludlow, has an altitude of 540 metres.
    20191113_shropshire hills_018.jpg
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