Lake District National Park topographic map
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Lake District National Park
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 Head in the west to Shap in the east. Most of these valleys display the U-shaped cross-section characteristic of glacial origin and often contain long narrow lakes in bedrock hollows, with tracts of relatively flat ground at their infilled heads, or where they are divided by lateral tributaries (Buttermere-Crummock Water; Derwent Water-Bassenthwaite Lake). Smaller lakes known as tarns occupy glacial cirques at higher elevations. It is the abundance of both which has led to the area becoming known as the Lake District.
About this map

Name: Lake District National Park topographic map, elevation, terrain.
Location: Lake District National Park, England, United Kingdom (54.19333 -3.49567 54.76368 -2.58259)
Average elevation: 206 m
Minimum elevation: 0 m
Maximum elevation: 962 m
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