Geolocate

Old Coulsdon topographic map

Click on the map to display elevation.

About this map

Name: Old Coulsdon topographic map, elevation, terrain.

Location: Old Coulsdon, Greater London, England, CR5 1EA, United Kingdom (51.28709 -0.13965 51.32709 -0.09965)

Average elevation: 139 m

Minimum elevation: 73 m

Maximum elevation: 189 m

England trails, hiking, mountain biking, running and outdoor activities

Other topographic maps

Click on a map to view its topography, its elevation and its terrain.

Greater London

United Kingdom > England

Average elevation: 66 m

Bristol

United Kingdom > England > City of Bristol

Average elevation: 55 m

Isle of Wight

United Kingdom > England

Average elevation: 17 m

Greater Manchester

United Kingdom > England

Average elevation: 141 m

Nottingham

United Kingdom > England > Nottinghamshire

Average elevation: 56 m

Sheffield

United Kingdom > England

Sheffield nestles on the eastern foothills of the Pennines and is sculpted by a dramatic hill-and-valley system formed where five rivers — the Don, Sheaf, Rivelin, Loxley and Porter — converge, producing steep-sided valleys and gritstone ridgelines with much of the urban area built directly onto hillsides…

Average elevation: 168 m

Cumbria

United Kingdom > England

Average elevation: 186 m

South East England

United Kingdom > England

Near Weybridge are the UK headquarters of Sony with SSP Group (situated in Byfleet) and Procter & Gamble (next door to each other on The Heights Business Park near the former Brooklands racing circuit) with Kia Motors UK and Petroleum Geo-Services UK, and Gallaher Group (cigarettes) is to the north, next to…

Average elevation: 69 m

Bath

United Kingdom > England > Bath and North East Somerset

Bath is in the Avon Valley and is surrounded by limestone hills as it is near the southern edge of the Cotswolds, a designated Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty, and the limestone Mendip Hills rise around 7 miles (11 km) south of the city. The hills that surround and make up the city have a maximum altitude…

Average elevation: 100 m

Cambridge

United Kingdom > England > Cambridge

The city, like most of the UK, has a maritime climate highly influenced by the Gulf Stream. Located in the driest region of Britain, Cambridge's rainfall averages around 570 mm (22.44 in) per year, around half the national average, with some years occasionally falling into the semi-arid (under 500 mm (19.69…

Average elevation: 18 m

Leeds

United Kingdom > England

Average elevation: 96 m

Cornwall

United Kingdom > England

The interior of the county consists of a roughly east–west spine of infertile and exposed upland, with a series of granite intrusions, such as Bodmin Moor, which contains the highest land within Cornwall. From east to west, and with approximately descending altitude, these are Bodmin Moor, Hensbarrow north…

Average elevation: 55 m

Oxford

United Kingdom > England > Oxfordshire

Average elevation: 81 m

Birmingham

United Kingdom > England

Birmingham is a snowy city relative to other large UK conurbations, due to its inland location and comparatively high elevation. Between 1961 and 1990 Birmingham Airport averaged 13.0 days of snow lying annually, compared to 5.33 at London Heathrow. Snow showers often pass through the city via the Cheshire gap…

Average elevation: 138 m

Nantwich

United Kingdom > England > Cheshire East

Average elevation: 45 m

Wirral

United Kingdom > England

Average elevation: 21 m

Kent

United Kingdom > England

Kent was also the location of the largest number of art schools in the country during the nineteenth century, estimated by the art historian David Haste, to approach two hundred. This is believed to be the result of Kent being a front line county during the Napoleonic Wars. At this time, before the invention…

Average elevation: 37 m

Stockport

United Kingdom > England

Average elevation: 95 m

Liverpool

United Kingdom > England

Average elevation: 26 m

Oxfordshire

United Kingdom > England

Average elevation: 113 m

Trafford

United Kingdom > England

Average elevation: 32 m

Suffolk

United Kingdom > England

The west of the county lies on more resistant Cretaceous chalk. This chalk is responsible for a sweeping tract of largely downland landscapes that stretches from Dorset in the south west to Dover in the south east and north through East Anglia to the Yorkshire Wolds. The chalk is less easily eroded so forms…

Average elevation: 35 m

Somerset

United Kingdom > England

Average elevation: 87 m

Hampshire

United Kingdom > England

Average elevation: 73 m

Lake District National Park

United Kingdom > England

The Lake District is a roughly circular upland massif, deeply dissected by a broadly radial pattern of major valleys which are largely the result of repeated glaciations over the last 2 million years. The apparent radial pattern is not from a central dome, but from an axial watershed extending from St Bees…

Average elevation: 206 m

Dartmoor National Park

United Kingdom > England > Devon

Rainfall tends to be associated with Atlantic depressions or with convection. In summer, convection caused by solar surface heating sometimes forms shower clouds and a large proportion of rainfall falls from showers and thunderstorms at this time of year. The wettest months are November and December and on the…

Average elevation: 239 m

Brighton

United Kingdom > England > Brighton and Hove

Average elevation: 64 m

Wiltshire

United Kingdom > England

Average elevation: 115 m

Gloucestershire

United Kingdom > England

Average elevation: 99 m

Manchester

United Kingdom > England

Average elevation: 66 m

Norwich

United Kingdom > England > Norfolk

Average elevation: 28 m

Sunderland

United Kingdom > England

Average elevation: 46 m

Guildford

United Kingdom > England > Surrey

Average elevation: 74 m

York

United Kingdom > England

Average elevation: 16 m

East of England

United Kingdom > England

The East of England region has the lowest elevation range in the UK. Twenty percent of the region is below mean sea level, most of this in North Cambridgeshire, Norfolk and on the Essex Coast. Most of the remaining area is of low elevation, with extensive glacial deposits. The Fens, a large area of reclaimed…

Average elevation: 39 m

City of Bristol

United Kingdom > England

Average elevation: 80 m

Essex

United Kingdom > England

Average elevation: 44 m

Cheltenham

United Kingdom > England > Gloucestershire

Average elevation: 109 m

Oxford

United Kingdom > England > Oxfordshire

Average elevation: 81 m

Canterbury

United Kingdom > England > Kent

Average elevation: 51 m

Barlaston

United Kingdom > England > Staffordshire > Stafford

Average elevation: 132 m

Dorset

United Kingdom > England

Average elevation: 56 m

Wiltshire

United Kingdom > England

Average elevation: 115 m

Northumberland

United Kingdom > England

Average elevation: 141 m

Maldon

United Kingdom > England

Average elevation: 27 m

Lincolnshire

United Kingdom > England

Lincolnshire has had a comparatively quiet history, being a rural county which was not heavily industrialised and faced little threat of invasion. In the Roman era Lincoln was a major settlement, called Lindum Colonia. In the fifth century what would become the county was settled by the invading Angles, who…

Average elevation: 26 m

Shropshire

United Kingdom > England

Average elevation: 166 m

Lincolnshire

United Kingdom > England

Average elevation: 28 m

North Lincolnshire

United Kingdom > England

Average elevation: 22 m

South Downs National Park

United Kingdom > England > West Sussex

The South Downs National Park's chalk downland is a feature that sets it apart from other national parks in Britain. However, almost a quarter (23%) of the national park consists of a quite different and strongly contrasting physiographic region, the western Weald, whose densely wooded hills and vales are…

Average elevation: 54 m

Norfolk

United Kingdom > England

Average elevation: 23 m

Cambridgeshire

United Kingdom > England

Cambridgeshire has a maritime temperate climate which is broadly similar to the rest of the United Kingdom, though it is drier than the UK average due to its low altitude and easterly location, the prevailing southwesterly winds having already deposited moisture on higher ground further west. Average winter…

Average elevation: 32 m

Calderdale

United Kingdom > England

Average elevation: 259 m

Herefordshire

United Kingdom > England

Average elevation: 159 m

Surrey

United Kingdom > England > Surrey

The highest elevation in Surrey is Leith Hill near Dorking. It is 295 m (968 ft) above sea level and is the second highest point in southeastern England after Walbury Hill in West Berkshire which is 297 m (974 ft).

Average elevation: 69 m

Lincoln

United Kingdom > England > Lincolnshire

Lincoln lies 157 mi (253 km) north of London, at an altitude of 67 ft (20.4 m) by the River Witham up to 246 ft (75.0 m) on Castle Hill. It fills a gap in the Lincoln Cliff escarpment, which runs north and south through central Lincolnshire, with altitudes up to 200 feet (61 metres). The city lies on the River…

Average elevation: 29 m

Southampton

United Kingdom > England

Average elevation: 22 m

Chatton

United Kingdom > England > Northumberland

Average elevation: 111 m

Amersham

United Kingdom > England > Buckinghamshire

Average elevation: 137 m

Hexham

United Kingdom > England > Northumberland

Average elevation: 122 m

North West England

United Kingdom > England

Average elevation: 118 m

North Yorkshire

United Kingdom > England

Average elevation: 153 m

Exeter

United Kingdom > England > Devon

The city of Exeter was established on the eastern bank of the River Exe on a ridge of land backed by a steep hill. It is at this point that the Exe, having just been joined by the River Creedy, opens onto a wide flood plain and estuary which results in quite common flooding. Historically this was the lowest…

Average elevation: 56 m

Coventry

United Kingdom > England

Average elevation: 99 m

Buckland Newton

United Kingdom > England > Dorset

Average elevation: 142 m

Ashover CP

United Kingdom > England > Derbyshire > North East Derbyshire

By the 18th century, there were several thousand acres of unenclosed moorland in the parish of Ashover, principally covered with heath. The only paths across this wilderness for roads were tracks in the sand or heath with here and there a stone post on the hills or elevations to serve as guides to the…

Average elevation: 210 m

East Anglia

United Kingdom > England

Average elevation: 29 m

Gloucestershire

United Kingdom > England

Average elevation: 104 m

Grundisburgh

United Kingdom > England > Suffolk > East Suffolk

Average elevation: 40 m

Woodbury Common

United Kingdom > England > Devon > East Devon > Yettington

Average elevation: 118 m

Glastonbury

United Kingdom > England > Somerset

Average elevation: 15 m

Barnstaple

United Kingdom > England > Devon > North Devon

Average elevation: 47 m

Yorkshire

United Kingdom > England

In Yorkshire there is a very close relationship between the major topographical areas and the geological period in which they were formed. The Pennine chain of hills in the west is of Carboniferous origin. The central vale is Permo-Triassic. The North York Moors in the north-east of the county are Jurassic in…

Average elevation: 130 m

East Suffolk

United Kingdom > England > Suffolk

Average elevation: 22 m

Reading

United Kingdom > England

Jane Austen attended Reading Ladies Boarding School, based in the Abbey Gateway, in 1784–1786. Mary Russell Mitford lived in Reading for a number of years and then spent the rest of her life just outside the town at Three Mile Cross and Swallowfield. The fictional Belford Regis of her eponymous novel, first…

Average elevation: 54 m

Richmondshire

United Kingdom > England > North Yorkshire

Average elevation: 301 m

Sykehouse

United Kingdom > England > Doncaster

The village of Sykehouse contains the parish church of the Holy Trinity. Most of this grade II listed building was built in 1869 by C. H. Fowler, using red bricks and a Gothic Revival style. The tower is older, having been built in 1721, while the font is fifteenth century, but this is presumed to have come…

Average elevation: 6 m

Malvern Hills

United Kingdom > England > Worcestershire

Average elevation: 82 m

Primrose Hill

United Kingdom > England > London

Average elevation: 46 m

River Tees

United Kingdom > England

The source of the river at Teeshead just below Cross Fell is at an elevation of about 2,401 feet (732 m). It flows east-north-east through an area of shake holes through Carboniferous Limestone. Below Viewing Hill, it turns south to the Cow Green Reservoir constructed to store water to be released in dry…

Average elevation: 218 m

East Sussex

United Kingdom > England

Average elevation: 43 m

Devon

United Kingdom > England

Average elevation: 94 m

High Wycombe

United Kingdom > England > Buckinghamshire

Average elevation: 124 m

Lamesley

United Kingdom > England > Tyne and Wear > Gateshead

Average elevation: 86 m

Rugby

United Kingdom > England > Warwickshire

Average elevation: 112 m

Stroud

United Kingdom > England > Gloucestershire

Average elevation: 113 m

Gear up for your next adventure:

🛌Insulated Sleeping Mats - Crucial thermal protection when sleeping on cold, uneven ground
🥤Collapsible Water Bottles - Save space in your rucksack as you consume your water
📦Dry Bags - Waterproof bags to protect gear from rain
🧭Emergency Beacons - Safety beacons for remote outdoor locations
Lightweight Solo Tents - Backpacking tents designed for wild camping in the UK highlands

As an Amazon Associate, this site earns from qualifying purchases at no extra cost to you.