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  • Low sun at sundown over fields in the Hambleton Hills, North Yorkshire, England, UK. The Hambleton Hills are a range of hills which form the western edge of the North York Moors. They are the eastern boundary of the low lying Vale of Mowbray.
    20150916_yorkshire hambleton hills s...jpg
  • Low sun at sundown over fields in the Hambleton Hills, North Yorkshire, England, UK. The Hambleton Hills are a range of hills which form the western edge of the North York Moors. They are the eastern boundary of the low lying Vale of Mowbray.
    20150916_yorkshire hambleton hills s...jpg
  • Low sun at sundown over fields in the Hambleton Hills, North Yorkshire, England, UK. The Hambleton Hills are a range of hills which form the western edge of the North York Moors. They are the eastern boundary of the low lying Vale of Mowbray.
    20150916_yorkshire hambleton hills s...jpg
  • Low sun at sundown over fields in the Hambleton Hills, North Yorkshire, England, UK. The Hambleton Hills are a range of hills which form the western edge of the North York Moors. They are the eastern boundary of the low lying Vale of Mowbray.
    20150916_yorkshire hambleton hills s...jpg
  • Low sun at sundown over fields in the Hambleton Hills, North Yorkshire, England, UK. The Hambleton Hills are a range of hills which form the western edge of the North York Moors. They are the eastern boundary of the low lying Vale of Mowbray.
    20150916_yorkshire hambleton hills s...jpg
  • Low sun at sundown over fields in the Hambleton Hills, North Yorkshire, England, UK. The Hambleton Hills are a range of hills which form the western edge of the North York Moors. They are the eastern boundary of the low lying Vale of Mowbray.
    20150916_yorkshire hambleton hills s...jpg
  • Low sun at sundown over fields in the Hambleton Hills, North Yorkshire, England, UK. The Hambleton Hills are a range of hills which form the western edge of the North York Moors. They are the eastern boundary of the low lying Vale of Mowbray.
    20150916_yorkshire hambleton hills s...jpg
  • Low sun at sundown over fields in the Hambleton Hills, North Yorkshire, England, UK. The Hambleton Hills are a range of hills which form the western edge of the North York Moors. They are the eastern boundary of the low lying Vale of Mowbray.
    20150916_yorkshire hambleton hills s...jpg
  • Low sun at sundown over fields in the Hambleton Hills, North Yorkshire, England, UK. The Hambleton Hills are a range of hills which form the western edge of the North York Moors. They are the eastern boundary of the low lying Vale of Mowbray.
    20150916_yorkshire hambleton hills s...jpg
  • Low sun at sundown over fields in the Hambleton Hills, North Yorkshire, England, UK. The Hambleton Hills are a range of hills which form the western edge of the North York Moors. They are the eastern boundary of the low lying Vale of Mowbray.
    20150916_yorkshire hambleton hills s...jpg
  • Low sun at sundown over fields in the Hambleton Hills, North Yorkshire, England, UK. The Hambleton Hills are a range of hills which form the western edge of the North York Moors. They are the eastern boundary of the low lying Vale of Mowbray.
    20150916_yorkshire hambleton hills s...jpg
  • Low sun at sundown over fields in the Hambleton Hills, North Yorkshire, England, UK. The Hambleton Hills are a range of hills which form the western edge of the North York Moors. They are the eastern boundary of the low lying Vale of Mowbray.
    20150916_yorkshire hambleton hills s...jpg
  • Low sun at sundown over fields in the Hambleton Hills, North Yorkshire, England, UK. The Hambleton Hills are a range of hills which form the western edge of the North York Moors. They are the eastern boundary of the low lying Vale of Mowbray.
    20150916_yorkshire hambleton hills s...jpg
  • Low sun at sundown over fields in the Hambleton Hills, North Yorkshire, England, UK. The Hambleton Hills are a range of hills which form the western edge of the North York Moors. They are the eastern boundary of the low lying Vale of Mowbray.
    20150916_yorkshire hambleton hills s...jpg
  • Red poppies in a field in the Hambleton Hills, North Yorkshire, England, UK. The Hambleton Hills are a range of hills which form the western edge of the North York Moors. They are the eastern boundary of the low lying Vale of Mowbray.
    20150918_yorkshire red poppies_B.jpg
  • Red poppies in a field in the Hambleton Hills, North Yorkshire, England, UK. The Hambleton Hills are a range of hills which form the western edge of the North York Moors. They are the eastern boundary of the low lying Vale of Mowbray.
    20150918_yorkshire red poppies_C.jpg
  • Red poppies in a field in the Hambleton Hills, North Yorkshire, England, UK. The Hambleton Hills are a range of hills which form the western edge of the North York Moors. They are the eastern boundary of the low lying Vale of Mowbray.
    20150918_yorkshire red poppies_A.jpg
  • View looking from Kilburn towards the Kilburn White Horse in The Hambleton Hills, Yorkshire, England, UK. This hill figure is cut into the hillside in the North York Moors National Park near Kilburn in North Yorkshire. The figure is 318 feet (97 m) long by 220 ft (67 m) high and covers about 1.6 acres and said to be the largest and most northerly hill figure in England. Located on the southern flank of Sutton Bank, near Roulston Scar at the edge of the Hambleton table-land, it faces south-south-west and is visible from some distance.
    20150912_yorkshire white horse_D.jpg
  • View looking from Kilburn towards the Kilburn White Horse in The Hambleton Hills, Yorkshire, England, UK. This hill figure is cut into the hillside in the North York Moors National Park near Kilburn in North Yorkshire. The figure is 318 feet (97 m) long by 220 ft (67 m) high and covers about 1.6 acres and said to be the largest and most northerly hill figure in England. Located on the southern flank of Sutton Bank, near Roulston Scar at the edge of the Hambleton table-land, it faces south-south-west and is visible from some distance.
    20150912_yorkshire white horse_G.jpg
  • View looking from Kilburn towards the Kilburn White Horse in The Hambleton Hills, Yorkshire, England, UK. This hill figure is cut into the hillside in the North York Moors National Park near Kilburn in North Yorkshire. The figure is 318 feet (97 m) long by 220 ft (67 m) high and covers about 1.6 acres and said to be the largest and most northerly hill figure in England. Located on the southern flank of Sutton Bank, near Roulston Scar at the edge of the Hambleton table-land, it faces south-south-west and is visible from some distance.
    20150912_yorkshire white horse_F.jpg
  • View looking from Kilburn towards the Kilburn White Horse in The Hambleton Hills, Yorkshire, England, UK. This hill figure is cut into the hillside in the North York Moors National Park near Kilburn in North Yorkshire. The figure is 318 feet (97 m) long by 220 ft (67 m) high and covers about 1.6 acres and said to be the largest and most northerly hill figure in England. Located on the southern flank of Sutton Bank, near Roulston Scar at the edge of the Hambleton table-land, it faces south-south-west and is visible from some distance.
    20150912_yorkshire white horse_E.jpg
  • View looking from Kilburn towards the Kilburn White Horse in The Hambleton Hills, Yorkshire, England, UK. This hill figure is cut into the hillside in the North York Moors National Park near Kilburn in North Yorkshire. The figure is 318 feet (97 m) long by 220 ft (67 m) high and covers about 1.6 acres and said to be the largest and most northerly hill figure in England. Located on the southern flank of Sutton Bank, near Roulston Scar at the edge of the Hambleton table-land, it faces south-south-west and is visible from some distance.
    20150912_yorkshire white horse_C.jpg
  • View looking from Kilburn towards the Kilburn White Horse in The Hambleton Hills, Yorkshire, England, UK. This hill figure is cut into the hillside in the North York Moors National Park near Kilburn in North Yorkshire. The figure is 318 feet (97 m) long by 220 ft (67 m) high and covers about 1.6 acres and said to be the largest and most northerly hill figure in England. Located on the southern flank of Sutton Bank, near Roulston Scar at the edge of the Hambleton table-land, it faces south-south-west and is visible from some distance.
    20150912_yorkshire white horse_A.jpg
  • View looking from Kilburn towards the Kilburn White Horse in The Hambleton Hills, Yorkshire, England, UK. This hill figure is cut into the hillside in the North York Moors National Park near Kilburn in North Yorkshire. The figure is 318 feet (97 m) long by 220 ft (67 m) high and covers about 1.6 acres and said to be the largest and most northerly hill figure in England. Located on the southern flank of Sutton Bank, near Roulston Scar at the edge of the Hambleton table-land, it faces south-south-west and is visible from some distance.
    20150912_yorkshire white horse_B.jpg
  • Woodland worker Angela Cole (from Yorkshire Hurdles) collecting materials from a woodland in the Howardian Hills AONB. The Howardian Hills AONB is a landscape with well-wooded rolling countryside, patchwork of arable and pasture fields, scenic villages and historic country houses with classic parkland landscapes.
    02-07_1_1.jpg
  • Pine trees in woodland in The Hambleton Hills in North Yorkshire, England, UK.
    _N9A9747.jpg
  • Sunlight pours through the branches of trees in woodland in The Hambleton Hills in North Yorkshire, England, UK.
    _N9A9740.jpg
  • Sunlight pours through the branches of trees in woodland in The Hambleton Hills in North Yorkshire, England, UK.
    _N9A9735.jpg
  • Flower arranger, Joyce Farrow arranges freshly picked flowers from the garden at Castle Howard stately home, North Yorkshire, UK. Castle Howard is located in the Howardian Hills AONB, a landscape with well-wooded rolling countryside, patchwork of arable and pasture fields, scenic villages and historic country houses with classic parkland landscapes.
    33-09_1_1.jpg
  • Pine trees in woodland in The Hambleton Hills in North Yorkshire, England, UK.
    _N9A9742.jpg
  • Sunlight pours through the branches of trees in woodland in The Hambleton Hills in North Yorkshire, England, UK.
    _N9A9737.jpg
  • Silver Birch trees in woodland in The Hambleton Hills in North Yorkshire, England, UK.
    _N9A9745.jpg
  • Sunlight pours through the branches of trees in woodland in The Hambleton Hills in North Yorkshire, England, UK.
    _N9A9736.jpg
  • Flower arranger, Joyce Farrow stands in the walled garden of Castle Howard stately home holding a bunch of sweet peas, North Yorkshire, UK. Castle Howard is located in the Howardian Hills AONB, a landscape with well-wooded rolling countryside, patchwork of arable and pasture fields, scenic villages and historic country houses with classic parkland landscapes.
    34-18_1_1.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_021.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 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 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 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.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 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_012.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_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_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_009.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_010.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 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 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 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 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
  • 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
  • Landscape view from the top of the Malvern Hills in Great Malvern, United Kingdom. The Malvern Hills are a range of hills in the English countryside of Worcestershire, Herefordshire and Gloucestershire.
    20190203_malvern hills view_004.jpg
  • Landscape view from the top of the Malvern Hills in Great Malvern, United Kingdom. The Malvern Hills are a range of hills in the English countryside of Worcestershire, Herefordshire and Gloucestershire.
    20190203_malvern hills view_005.jpg
  • Landscape view across a frozen reservoir from the top of the Malvern Hills in Great Malvern, United Kingdom. The Malvern Hills are a range of hills in the English countryside of Worcestershire, Herefordshire and Gloucestershire.
    20190203_malvern hills view_006.jpg
  • Landscape view from the top of the Malvern Hills in Great Malvern, United Kingdom. The Malvern Hills are a range of hills in the English countryside of Worcestershire, Herefordshire and Gloucestershire.
    20190203_malvern hills view_003.jpg
  • Landscape view from the top of the Malvern Hills in Great Malvern, United Kingdom. The Malvern Hills are a range of hills in the English countryside of Worcestershire, Herefordshire and Gloucestershire.
    20190203_malvern hills view_002.jpg
  • Landscape view from the top of the Malvern Hills in Great Malvern, United Kingdom. The Malvern Hills are a range of hills in the English countryside of Worcestershire, Herefordshire and Gloucestershire.
    20190203_malvern hills view_001.jpg
  • Cows on the crest of a hill in the Shropshire AONB on 21st July 2020 in Cleedownton, United Kingdom. The Shropshire Hills Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty covers about a quarter of the county, mainly in the south. Shropshire is one of Englands most rural and sparsely populated counties.
    20200721_shropshire hills cows_003.jpg
  • Cows on the crest of a hill in the Shropshire AONB on 21st July 2020 in Cleedownton, United Kingdom. The Shropshire Hills Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty covers about a quarter of the county, mainly in the south. Shropshire is one of Englands most rural and sparsely populated counties.
    20200721_shropshire hills cows_006.jpg
  • Cows on the crest of a hill in the Shropshire AONB on 21st July 2020 in Cleedownton, United Kingdom. The Shropshire Hills Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty covers about a quarter of the county, mainly in the south. Shropshire is one of Englands most rural and sparsely populated counties.
    20200721_shropshire hills cows_001.jpg
  • Cows on the crest of a hill in the Shropshire AONB on 21st July 2020 in Cleedownton, United Kingdom. The Shropshire Hills Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty covers about a quarter of the county, mainly in the south. Shropshire is one of Englands most rural and sparsely populated counties.
    20200721_shropshire hills cows_005.jpg
  • Cows on the crest of a hill in the Shropshire AONB on 21st July 2020 in Cleedownton, United Kingdom. The Shropshire Hills Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty covers about a quarter of the county, mainly in the south. Shropshire is one of Englands most rural and sparsely populated counties.
    20200721_shropshire hills cows_004.jpg
  • Cows on the crest of a hill in the Shropshire AONB on 21st July 2020 in Cleedownton, United Kingdom. The Shropshire Hills Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty covers about a quarter of the county, mainly in the south. Shropshire is one of Englands most rural and sparsely populated counties.
    20200721_shropshire hills cows_002.jpg
  • Evening light just before sundown over Coverdale in the North Yorkshire Dales, England, UK. It is accessible by a single track road, which runs the length of the dale and over the pass. This is agricultural farming land which could not be more dramatic, under big skies with the hills criss crossed by dry stone walls.
    20150915_coverdale hills_C.jpg
  • Evening light just before sundown over Coverdale in the North Yorkshire Dales, England, UK. It is accessible by a single track road, which runs the length of the dale and over the pass. This is agricultural farming land which could not be more dramatic, under big skies with the hills criss crossed by dry stone walls.
    20150915_coverdale hills_B.jpg
  • Evening light just before sundown over Coverdale in the North Yorkshire Dales, England, UK. It is accessible by a single track road, which runs the length of the dale and over the pass. This is agricultural farming land which could not be more dramatic, under big skies with the hills criss crossed by dry stone walls.
    20150915_coverdale hills_A.jpg
  • Famous salt flats at Gruissan, Languedoc-Roussillon, France. This area is very well known for producing sea salt from it's salt fields or marshes on this coastline. Sea salt farms, with giant hills of salt - "Camelles", in differing shades of brown and white, and the flat "fields" of salt water.
    20150605_france gruissan salt hills_...jpg
  • Famous salt flats at Gruissan, Languedoc-Roussillon, France. This area is very well known for producing sea salt from it's salt fields or marshes on this coastline. Sea salt farms, with giant hills of salt - "Camelles", in differing shades of brown and white, and the flat "fields" of salt water.
    20150605_france gruissan salt hills_...jpg
  • Famous salt flats at Gruissan, Languedoc-Roussillon, France. This area is very well known for producing sea salt from it's salt fields or marshes on this coastline. Sea salt farms, with giant hills of salt - "Camelles", in differing shades of brown and white, and the flat "fields" of salt water.
    20150605_france gruissan salt hills_...jpg
  • Famous salt flats at Gruissan, Languedoc-Roussillon, France. This area is very well known for producing sea salt from it's salt fields or marshes on this coastline. Sea salt farms, with giant hills of salt - "Camelles", in differing shades of brown and white, and the flat "fields" of salt water.
    20150605_france gruissan salt hills_...jpg
  • Famous salt flats at Gruissan, Languedoc-Roussillon, France. This area is very well known for producing sea salt from it's salt fields or marshes on this coastline. Sea salt farms, with giant hills of salt - "Camelles", in differing shades of brown and white, and the flat "fields" of salt water.
    20150605_france gruissan salt hills_...jpg
  • Famous salt flats at Gruissan, Languedoc-Roussillon, France. This area is very well known for producing sea salt from it's salt fields or marshes on this coastline. Sea salt farms, with giant hills of salt - "Camelles", in differing shades of brown and white, and the flat "fields" of salt water.
    20150605_france gruissan salt hills_...jpg
  • Famous salt flats at Gruissan, Languedoc-Roussillon, France. This area is very well known for producing sea salt from it's salt fields or marshes on this coastline. Sea salt farms, with giant hills of salt - "Camelles", in differing shades of brown and white, and the flat "fields" of salt water.
    20150605_france gruissan salt hills_...jpg
  • Famous salt flats at Gruissan, Languedoc-Roussillon, France. This area is very well known for producing sea salt from it's salt fields or marshes on this coastline. Sea salt farms, with giant hills of salt - "Camelles", in differing shades of brown and white, and the flat "fields" of salt water.
    20150605_france gruissan salt hills_...jpg
  • Famous salt flats at Gruissan, Languedoc-Roussillon, France. This area is very well known for producing sea salt from it's salt fields or marshes on this coastline. Sea salt farms, with giant hills of salt - "Camelles", in differing shades of brown and white, and the flat "fields" of salt water.
    20150605_france gruissan salt hills_...jpg
  • Famous salt flats at Gruissan, Languedoc-Roussillon, France. This area is very well known for producing sea salt from it's salt fields or marshes on this coastline. Sea salt farms, with giant hills of salt - "Camelles", in differing shades of brown and white, and the flat "fields" of salt water.
    20150605_france gruissan salt hills_...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_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
  • Old quarry on top of Titterstone 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_021.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
  • Radar station on top of Titterstone 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_020.jpg
  • Old quarry on top of Titterstone 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_007.jpg
  • Radar station on top of Titterstone 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_003.jpg
  • Radar station on top of Titterstone Clee Hill on 21st 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.
    20200721_titterstone clee hill_002.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_027.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 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_025.jpg
  • View from Titterstone 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_024.jpg
  • View from Titterstone 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_022.jpg
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